In 1958, Suzanne and Ezra Vogel embedded themselves in a Tokyo suburban
community, interviewing six middle-class families regularly for a year.
Their research led to Japan's New Middle Class, a classic work on the
sociology of Japan. Now, Suzanne Hall Vogel's compelling sequel traces
the evolution of Japanese society over the ensuing decades through the
lives of three of these ordinary yet remarkable women and their
daughters and granddaughters. Vogel contends that the role of the
professional housewife constrained Japanese middle-class women in the
postwar era-and yet it empowered them as well. Precisely because of
fixed gender roles, with women focusing on the home and children while
men focused on work, Japanese housewives had remarkable authority and
autonomy within their designated realm. Wives and mothers now have more
options than their mothers and grandmothers did, but they find
themselves unprepared to cope with this new era of choice. These
gripping biographies poignantly illustrate the strengths and the
vulnerabilities of professional housewives and of families facing social
change and economic uncertainty in contemporary Japan.