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Visualizing the negative space: Making feminine accounting practices visible by reference to Japanese women's household accounting practices
Authors:Naoko Komori
Affiliation:1. Brunel University London, UK;2. Université Paris-Dauphine, France;3. Koç University, Turkey;4. Queen Mary University of London, UK;5. University of Bedfordshire, UK;1. Department of Accounting and Finance, Aberdeen Business School, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen AB10 7QE, United Kingdom;2. Department of Accountancy and Finance, University of Otago, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand
Abstract:This study explores the nature of feminine accounting practices by examining the household accounting practices of Japanese women in the second half of the twentieth century. Household accounting in Japan provides an excellent research site to understand the nature of feminine accounting practices. The social significance of the Japanese household and the country's cultural emphasis on interdependence mean that accounting has a different meaning in the life of Japanese women, compared to what has been identified in Anglo-Saxon-based studies. The study finds that their accounting practice is characterized by the integration of masculine and feminine qualities, as illustrated by Dillard and Reynolds (2008), and is more enabling in nature. Women use ‘hard’, objective accounting figures both to foster the long-term development of the family and to contribute to Japanese society. Accounting has been a vehicle for women to express their motherhood and construct their identity as women. The distinctive nature of Japanese women's accounting practice and the role this practice plays in facilitating feminine values highlight how important it is to further investigate feminine accounting practice in different social and cultural contexts in order to develop gender research in accounting.
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