Setsuko Hani (April 2, 1903 – July 10, 1987; in Japanese: 羽仁説子) was a Japanese writer, educator, and social critic, known for her 1948 essay "The Japanese Family System".
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 (Fujin minshū kurabu) in March 1946,[3] and joined Shidzue Kato, Yoko Matsuoka (who was also Hani's cousin), and other feminists in presenting a statement to General Douglas Macarthur on women's rights in post-war Japan.[4] As a "child welfare expert", she expressed concern for the children born to Western fathers and Japanese women during the post-war occupation.[5] In 1955 she was one of Japan's five representatives at the Women's International Democratic Federation (WIDF) meeting in Geneva.[6]
Publications
"The Japanese Family System" (1948, published by the Japan Institute of Pacific Studies)[7][8]
Bonza and the Little Novice (1956)
Shiiburuto no Musumetachi (Siebold's Daughters)[9]
Tsuma no kokoro (1979, A Wife's Heart)
Personal life
Hani married historian Goro Hani [ja]; their son was film director Susumu Hani (born 1928),[2] and their daughter was music educator and translator Kyoko Hani [ja](1929–2015). Her husband died in 1983, and she died in 1987, at the age of 84.
^Hani, Setsuko. The Japanese Family System: As Seen from the Standpoint of Japanese Women. Nihon Taiheiyo Mondai Chosakai (Japan Institute of Pacific Studies), 1948.