Women in Ancient and Medieval Civilizations and the Cultural Uniqueness of Japan
: A Comparative Anthropological Inquiry into the Gender-Mixed “Uta-awase” Poetry Contests
This article examines why Japan uniquely developed gender-mixed uta-awase poetry contests in which women participated on equal footing with men. Through a comparative anthropological perspective, I contrast Japan with ancient Greece and Rome, China, the Islamic world, and medieval Europe to clarify the structural conditions that made Japan’s mixed literary arena possible.
I have long been fascinated by the fact that, in ancient and medieval Japan, the uta-awase (poetry contest) eventually became a gender-mixed arena in which women poets competed with men on equal footing. Given that waka constituted the core of aristocratic culture—deeply intertwined with political prestige and social hierarchy—it would not have been strange if poetry contests had remained a strictly male domain. Yet from the mid-Heian period onward, women poets actively participated, competed openly with men, and their achievements were officially recorded. From a global historical perspective, this phenomenon is exceptionally rare.
In this essay, I attempt a comparative anthropological analysis of why Japan alone developed such a gender-mixed literary arena. To do so, I survey major civilizations—Ancient Greece and Rome, the Ancient Near East and Judaeo-Christian world, the medieval Islamic empires, medieval Europe, and ancient–medieval China—and compare their social structures surrounding “women” as public cultural actors.
1. Did Gender-Mixed Literary Contests Exist in Other Ancient or Medieval Civilizations?
The short answer is almost never.
A gender-mixed literary competition that:
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allowed women to appear in a public arena,
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evaluated them on equal terms with men, and
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left official, historically preserved records
is virtually unattested outside Japan.
■Ancient Greece and Rome
Greek poetic competitions at festivals such as the Πύθια (Pythia), Διονύσια (Dionysia), and Πανήγυρις (Panēgyris) were civic rituals reserved for male citizens (πολῖται / politai). Women were excluded from public competition.
Even though a famous female poet such as Sappho (Σαπφώ Sapphō) existed, she did not participate in public contests.
■Ancient Judaic and Early Christian Worlds
Although the Hebrew Bible mentions female prophets (נְבִיאָה nevi’ah), the official sphere of religious language remained male-dominated. Literary or rhetorical competitions involving both sexes did not exist.
■Medieval Islamic Empires
The Islamic world produced renowned female poets such as al-Khansā’ (الخنساء al-Khansāʾ).
However, shi‘r (شعر shi‘r, “poetry”) functioned as an extension of male honor culture; public poetic contention (munāẓara مناظرة) was primarily a male domain. Institutionalized gender-mixed contests are absent.
■Ancient–Medieval China
China possessed a highly developed poetic culture, but public literary production—especially the civil examination system (科舉 kējǔ)—was strictly male. Social norms and institutional structures prevented women from entering such public evaluative arenas.
2. Why Did Japan Alone Establish a Gender-Mixed Arena for Literary Competition?
Four structural conditions—anthropological, social, and cultural—appear decisive.
(A) Japan Maintained a Bilateral, Not Strictly Patrilineal, Kinship Structure
Unlike most major ancient civilizations, which were strongly patrilineal, Japan retained notable bilateral (双系 sōkei) or ambilineal traits.
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importance of both maternal and paternal lines
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widespread patterns of muko-iri (婿入り) and tsuma-tori marriages
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inheritance and cultural transmission not fixed exclusively in the father’s line
-
women often held substantial autonomy within the household structure
This helped ensure that women were not categorically excluded from cultural agency.
In contrast, strongly patrilineal societies (China, Islamic world, the Mediterranean) structurally restricted women’s access to public expression.
(B) The Japanese Court Prioritized “Cultural Capital” over Political or Military Power
The Heian court was an exceptionally rare “culture-centered polity,” where linguistic talent—not force, not wealth—was the highest prestige.
-
aristocratic evaluation depended on waka, calligraphy, and literary style
-
romantic interactions were mediated by writing, not physical presence
-
men gained social authority through poetic exchanges with court ladies
-
women’s literary talent increased the prestige of their natal families
No other major civilization placed aesthetic literacy (linguistic–textual competence) so centrally in elite sociopolitical life.
Greek culture valued physical excellence; Islamic culture valued eloquence as male virtue; China valued Confucian moral literacy validated by the male-only examination system; medieval Europe valued lineage and martial ability.
Japan differed fundamentally.
(C) The Imperial Inner Quarters (後宮 kōkyū) Functioned as a Cultural Production Center
This is arguably Japan’s most distinctive structural feature.
Whereas the harems of China or the Islamic world were politically secluded and culturally peripheral, the Japanese inner palace functioned as:
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an information hub
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a center of textual production
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a space where elite men and women interacted through writing
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the birthplace of canonical literature (e.g., Genji monogatari, Makura no sōshi) produced by women writers
Thus the kōkyū was not a closed female world but a cultural engine of the polity.
Without this, gender-mixed uta-awase could not have emerged.
(D) Indigenous Religious Cosmologies Did Not Place Women as Ontologically Inferior
Many major civilizations framed women as deficient beings:
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Greece: women lacking logos (λόγος logos, reason)
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Christianity: Eve, sin, and theological inferiority
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Islam: juridical differentiation under sharīʿa (شريعة sharīʿa)
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Confucian China: the “Three Obediences” (三従 sān cóng) and patriarchal virtues
Japan lacked a comparable ontological degradation.
-
the supreme kami Amaterasu (天照大神) is female
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women served as shamans or mediums (巫女 miko)
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the concept of impurity (穢れ kegare) did not equate to rational or moral deficiency
This allowed women to participate flexibly in symbolic and cultural roles.
3. Why Did Other Civilizations Not Develop Gender-Mixed Literary Arenas?
Summarizing the global comparison:
■(1) Women Were Systematically Excluded from Public Space
Public arenas—political, literary, ritual—were almost everywhere male domains.
■(2) Literary Art Was Typically an Extension of Male Honor
Greek poetic contention, Arabic munāẓara, Roman eloquence, and Chinese civil examinations were all tied to male status systems.
■(3) Women’s Access to Literacy Was Structurally Limited
Japan is one of the few civilizations where:
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women developed a highly sophisticated vernacular script (仮名 kana)
-
women produced canonical literature
-
women were central to elite communication networks
This combination is virtually unparalleled.
4. Conclusion
I believe the emergence of gender-mixed uta-awase contests in Japan was enabled by the convergence of four unique conditions:
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A bilateral kinship structure allowing women greater social room
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A court society where cultural capital outweighed political or military capital
-
An inner-palace system that functioned as a cultural production center
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A religious cosmology that did not ontologically degrade women
This combination appears to be a historical–anthropological singularity. The gender-mixed uta-awase is thus not merely a literary phenomenon but a window into the structural uniqueness of Japanese civilization.
◆Bibliography / References (original-language titles only) (To be added by author)
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A. Lesky, Geschichte der griechischen Literatur
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Simon Goldhill, The Poet's Voice: Essays on Poetics and Greek Literature
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Mary Lefkowitz, Women in Greek Myth
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Ⅲ. Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity (Women, Public Sphere, and Scripture Discourse)
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תנ״ך (Tanakh)
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Μάρκος, Εὐαγγέλιον (euangelion)
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Ⅳ. The Classical Islamic World (Women, Poetry, and Honor Culture)
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Ⅴ. Ancient and Medieval China (Patriarchal System, Civil Service System, Women's History)
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『漢書』
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『宋史』
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Patricia Buckley Ebrey, The Inner Quarters: Marriage and the Lives of Chinese Women in the Sung Period
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Bret Hinsch, Women in Early Imperial China
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Mark Edward Lewis, The Construction of Space in Early China
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Hildegard von Bingen, Liber divinorum operum
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Caroline Walker Bynum, Holy Feast and Holy Fast
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Judith Bennett, Women in the Medieval English Countryside
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Joan Kelly, Women, History and Theory
Ⅶ. Comparative Civilization, Historical Anthropology, Women/Kinship Structures
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Claude Lévi-Strauss, Les structures élémentaires de la parenté
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Jack Goody, The Development of the Family and Marriage in Europe
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Jack Goody, The Logic of Writing and the Organization of Society
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Marcel Mauss, Essai sur le don
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Pierre Bourdieu, La domination masculine
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Sherry B. Ortner, “Is Female to Male as Nature is to Culture?”
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Marilyn Strathern, The Gender of the Gift
Ⅷ. Japanese Women's History and Gender Studies (Basic Texts)
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Doris Bargen, A Woman's Weapon: Spirit Possession in The Tale of Genji
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Walter Ong, Orality and Literacy
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Ernst Robert Curtius, Europäische Literatur und lateinisches Mittelalter
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Roy Harris, Rethinking Writing
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