LGBT culture in Tokyo
Most LGBT institutions in Tokyo are in Shinjuku Ni-chōme. As of 2010 there are about 300 gay bars in this community.
History
See also Kagemachaya
For after World War II, The first gay bar opened in Shimbashi in 1945.[1] Its name was Yanagi (やなぎ).
In 1973 Tokyo's first onabe (masculine lesbian) bar opened in Roppongi. Its name was Kikōshi (貴公子 "young noble").[2]
After a youth recreation house in Fuchū began excluding LGBT members, the OCCUR (アカー akā) group began legal proceedings against it in 1990.[3]
In 2012 Tokyo Disney Resort in Urayasu, Chiba announced that it would allow same-sex couples to hold weddings there.[4] The first LGBT couple to hold a wedding at Tokyo Disney Resort did so in 2013. The two women were unable to legally marry in Japan.[5]
Geography
Most LGBT institutions in Tokyo are in Shinjuku Ni-chōme.[6] As of 2010 there are about 300 gay bars in this community.[7]
Tokyo's gay scene is not limited to Ni-chōme. A number of other areas, such as Ueno, Asakusa, Shimbashi, and Ikebukuro, have conglomerations of gay bars, although none as dense as in Ni-chōme. Information about these bars, bookstores, sex shops, and cruising spots can be found in the Otoko-machi Map (Boy's Town Map), a country-wide guide to Japanese gay establishments, or in monthly gay magazines like G-men and Badi. Tokyo also has a great number of gay "circles" including LGBT sports teams, cultural groups, and religious groups.
The number of gay bars in 2013 (Lesbian bar not included)[8]
- Shinjuku Total - 297[8]
- Shinjuku ni-chōme - 291[8]
- Kabukicho - 4[8]
- Nishi-Shinjuku - 2[8]
- Ueno - 95[8]
- Asakusa - 67[8]
- Shinbashi - 66[8]
- Ikebukuro - 21[8]
- Shibuya - 8[8]
- Nakano - 6[8]
Reference:Doyama(Osaka)-154, Sakae(Nagoya)-63, Fukuoka-62, Namba(Osaka)-42, Noge(Yokohama)-37, Susukino(Sapporo)-32, Nagarekawa (Hiroshima)-30, Sakurazaka(Okinawa)-26, Shinsekai(Osaka)-25
The number of gay-related businesses: Bar, nightclub, host club, cruising box, sauna, gay book and video store, etc. (Lesbian bars not included)
- Shinjuku Total - 460[8]
- Shinjuku ni-chōme - 402 (Bar-274, host clubs-17, Delivery health/Fashion health-28, Gay bathhouse & cruising boxes-15)[8]
- Nishi-Shinjuku - 18[8]
- Kabukicho - 17[8]
- North Shinjuku / Okubo - 14[8]
- Yoyogi (Shinjuku Station south exit) - 9[8]
- Ueno - 123[8]
- Asakusa - 80[8]
- Shinbashi - 74[8]
- Ikebukuro - 37[8]
- Nakano - 25[8]
- Shibuya - 15[8]
Reference:Doyama(Osaka)-230, Fukuoka-91, Sakae(Nagoya)-82, Namba(Osaka)-60, Noge(Yokohama)-53, Susukino(Sapporo)-51, Nagarekawa(Hiroshima)-37, Sakurazaka(Okinawa)-36, Shinsekai(Osaka)-32
Institutions
Regumi (short for レズビアン組 Rezubian-gumi or "Lesbian group") is a lesbian group in Tokyo.[3] The use of the abbreviation regumi avoids using the word "lesbian" (レスビアン resubian or レズビアン rezubian) and the abbreviation rezu (レズ), which in Japanese is derogatory.[9]
The Tokyo Gay and Lesbian Deaf Rainbow Alliance,[10] or the Tokyo Lesbian and Gay Deaf Community (TLGDC), is in the city.[3] Taski Tade, who was a member of this group, conducted an interview that was translated into English.[11]
OCCUR has an English name that does not directly indicate that it is an LGBT group.[3]
Recreation
As of 2012 there are two gay pride parades in Tokyo: Tokyo Rainbow Pride (TRP) and Tokyo Pride.
In 1994 the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA) began organizing the Tokyo Pride Parade, originally named the Tokyo Lesbian & Gay Parade (TL&GP); it was Japan's first gay pride parade. The event received its current name in 2007. The parade had a hiatus from 2008, ending in 2010. It had another hiatus in 2011.[12] In 2010 Antoni Slodowski of Reuters wrote that "Although the number of participants in the parade is on the rise, it is a small crowd in a city of 12.8 million people and the event is relatively small even by Asian standards."[13]
In May 2011 Tokyo Rainbow Pride was created. The organizers created it to ensure that a gay pride parade would be held in Tokyo in the event Tokyo Pride could not be held.[12] Akie Abe attended Tokyo Rainbow Pride in 2012.[14] Rainbow Pride is a part of Rainbow Week (東京レインボーウィーク Tōkyō Reinbōwīku).[15]
Notable residents
- Aya Kamikawa (transgender politician in Setagaya ward)[16]
See also
- Kagemachaya (陰間茶屋, Japanese gay bar)
- LGBT culture in Japan
- Gay rights in Japan
- Homosexuality in Japan
References
- Valentine, James. "Pots and Pans: Identification of Queer Japanese in Terms of Discrimination" (Chapter 5). In: Livia, Anna and Kira Hall (editors). Queerly Phrased : Language, Gender, and Sexuality: Language, Gender, and Sexuality. Oxford University Press, October 7, 1997. ISBN 0195355776, 9780195355772. Start p. 95.
Notes
- ↑ 「サービスの達人たち」(新潮文庫・旧タイトル「日本のおかま第一号」)及び新潮45-2005年9月号「三島由紀夫に長嶋茂雄…名物ゲイバー吉野のママが語る隠花植物的人性」、クレア1991年2月号「ゲイルネッサンス91」P87(文藝春秋)
- ↑ Valentine, p. 103.
- 1 2 3 4 Valentine, p. 104.
- ↑ "Disneyland champions gay rights in Japan" (Archive). Pink News. May 18, 2012. Retrieved on September 24, 2014.
- ↑ "Two lesbians become 1st gay couple to wed at Tokyo Disney Resort." Agence France Presse at The Straits Times. March 5, 2013. Retrieved on September 24, 2014.
- ↑ Rieber, Beth. Frommer's Tokyo. John Wiley & Sons, April 30, 2012. p. 269.
- ↑ "". Independent. February 7, 2010. Retrieved on March 16, 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Gclick
- ↑ Valentine, p. 104-105.
- ↑ Nakamura, Karen (Yale University). "Trans/Disability: Disability, Queer Sexualities, and Transsexuality from a Comparative Ethnographic Perspective" (トランス/ディサビリティー:比較人類学視点から見る現代の障害者運動、クイアーセクシュアリティ、と性同一性障害運動; Archive). University of Tokyo. p. 11 (11/18). Retrieved on September 24, 2014.
- ↑ Symons, Caroline. The Gay Games: A History (Routledge Critical Studies in Sport). Routledge, April 26, 2010. ISBN 1134027907, 9781134027903. p. 158.
- 1 2 Siguenza. "Tokyo gets double dose of gay pride for 2012" (Archive). The Japan Times. April 24, 2012. Retrieved on September 24, 2014.
- ↑ Slodowski, Antoni. "Japan's gay community parades for first time in 3 years" (Archive). Reuters. August 14, 2010. Retrieved on September 24, 2014.
- ↑ Garcia, Michelle. "Japan's First Lady Shines At Tokyo Pride." The Advocate. April 27, 2014. Retrieved on September 24, 2014.
- ↑ "Japan: Thousands march in Tokyo in support of LGBT rights" (Archive). Pink News. April 28, 2013. Retrieved on September 24, 2014.
- ↑ Nakagawa, Ulara. "Japan's lesbians still scared to come out" (Archive). CNN. November 19, 2010. Retrieved on September 24, 2014.
Further reading
- Nakagawa, Ulara. "Best Tokyo gay and lesbian bars" (Archive). CNN. January 11, 2011.
- "Japan (GAYCATION Episode 1)." Viceland. February 24, 2016. - Documentary by Ellen Page
External links
- Tokyo Rainbow Week (Japanese)