Setsuko Hani


Setsuko Hani was a Japanese writer, educator, and social critic, known for her 1948 essay "The Japanese Family System".

Early life and education

Hani Setsuko was born in Tokyo, the daughter of journalists and Hani Motoko. She was educated at the school her parents founded, Jiyu Gakuen.

Career

Hani was a reporter and teacher as a young woman. In the 1930s she ran a school for Japanese children in Beijing. She was one of the founders of the Women's Democratic Club in March 1946, and joined Shidzue Kato, Yoko Matsuoka, and other feminists in presenting a statement to General Douglas Macarthur on women's rights in post-war Japan. As a "child welfare expert", she expressed concern for the children born to Western fathers and Japanese women during the post-war occupation. In 1955 she was one of Japan's five representatives at the Women's International Democratic Federation meeting in Geneva.

Publications

  • "The Japanese Family System" Bonza and the Little Novice Shiiburuto no Musumetachi
  • ''Tsuma no kokoro''

Personal life

Hani married historian ; their son was film director Susumu Hani, and their daughter was music educator and translator. Her husband died in 1983, and she died in 1987, at the age of 84.