Feminists, look away! Fashion police in Japan want to ’empower’ women by
persuading them to wear high heels, insisting the country’s historic
‘kimono culture’ has led to many women having poor posture. The Japan High
Heel Association (JHA) is calling on women across the
country to trade sensible shoes for a pair of stilettos, insisting that
standing tall will give them ‘confidence’ — and improve their gait.
“Japanese women walk like ducks,” JHA managing director ‘Madame’ Yumiko
told AFP in an interview at her plush Tokyo salon. “They waddle along,
pigeon-toed, with their bottoms sticking out as if they’re bursting to use
the toilet. It looks ghastly,” she added. In an apparent bid to improve
this situation, the all-female organisation charges thousands of dollars
for etiquette lessons, including special classes where women are taught to
walk correctly, and particularly in high heels.
Critics have branded the idea sexist and laughable, particularly as women
are still battling against a deeply ingrained patriarchal culture that once
expected them to pace three steps behind men.
Yet the “walking etiquette classes” are proving hugely popular: At JHA
students pay 400,000 yen (3,700 US dollars) for a six-month course — and
so far 4,000 have taken part, while similar lessons and schools are popping
up nationwide.
The 48-year-old former ballerina blames the countries sartorial heritage
for the posture problem.
“Chinese or Korean ladies don’t have these problems,” she said. “It’s a
result of Japan’s kimono culture and shuffling about in straw sandals. It’s
ingrained in the way Japanese walk.”
“But very few Japanese wear a kimono all day anymore. We should know about
Western culture and how to wear heels correctly,” Yumiko added.
The shift away from traditional Japanese clothes happened gradually from
around the late 19th century but it is only been since the 1980s that
stilettos have become a fashion staple.
This ‘call to heels’ comes at a time when the West is experiencing a
feminist fightback against diktats on how women should dress. Hollywood
star Julia Roberts went barefoot on the red carpet during the Cannes Film
Festival in May — an act of rebellion after organisers caused
uproar by ejecting women for wearing flat shoes at the previous year’s
event.
Last month more than 100,000 British people petitioned parliament in the
UK, calling for a change to an outdated dress code law that allowed
employers to require women to wear high heels in the work place. The
campaign, now backed by several politicians, was launched by a receptionist
who was sent home by a firm for wearing flat shoes.
But Yumiko argues wearing heels will help “Japanese women become more
confident”.
She explains: “Many women are too shy to express themselves. In Japanese
culture, women are not expected to stand out or put themselves first.” Her
solution is for women suffocated by such strict protocols to simply “throw
on a pair of heels,” arguing the freedom it brings can unlock the mind.
Prominent Japanese social commentator Mitsuko Shimomura dismissed the idea
as “nonsense” that most would laugh at. She said: “There’s no relationship
between wearing high heels and women’s power. It sounds crazy.”
Heels have been in and out of vogue — for men and women — for centuries,
with murals on ancient Egyptian tombs dating them back to around 4,000 BC.
But they still have a key role to play in modern courtship, according to
JHA director Tomoko Kubota.”If women look sexier, it will help Japanese men
buck up their ideas,” the 45-year-old said.
A 2014 study by scientists from France’s Universite de Bretagne-Sud
supports this view. The group conducted social experiments that showed men
behave more positively toward high-heeled women. In one test, they found if
a woman dropped her glove on the street, men were 50 percent more likely to
stop and return it to her if she was wearing heels rather than flats, while
female behaviour remained unchanged regardless of shoe worn, according to
results published in the journal, Archives of Sexual Behaviour.
Students from across Japan sitting JHA exams for a certificate that allows
them to become high heel instructors sing from the same hymn sheet. “We
learn how to move in a kimono and how to bow correctly, but not how to walk
(in heels),” said hypnotherapist Takako Watanabe, 46 after a walking
lesson.
“It might help us catch a hunky guy,” she adds. Fellow JHA alumni Ayako
Miyata agrees it is an important skill that few Japanese women have
mastered. “It makes you look more lady-like,” said the 44-year-old, who has
spent thousands amassing a stiletto collection. “They’re an essential item
for a modern woman to feel pride and confidence in herself.”
Yumiko, whose parlour is a veritable shrine to France’s King Louis XIV,
lined with frilly curtains embroidered with the image of the dandy,
heel-wearing monarch, gives short shrift to accusations of sexism — she
wants men to change their footwear too. She explains: “As in the
Renaissance period, men want to look taller and more stylish. Men should
wear heels, so they can preen majestically like Louis XIV. I’m sure it will
happen.” (AFP)
Photos: Christian Louboutin, Facebook