About this Event
This lecture revisits one of the most remarkable yet understudied episodes in Japan’s post-war history: the Give Us Our Blue Skies Back movement, led by nearly 7,000 housewives in Tobata (Kitakyūshū) between 1950 and 1969. Situated at the heart of Japan’s high-growth industrial expansion, these women confronted the devastating effects of air pollution emitted by the Yahata Steelworks—then one of Japan’s largest industrial complexes and a national symbol of economic recovery and technological progress. Without formal education or political experience, they organised one of Japan’s earliest and longest-running anti-pollution movements, combining grassroots mobilisation, scientific inquiry, and moral persuasion to demand accountability from both industry and government.
Their activism was remarkable not only for its scale but also for its epistemic sophistication. From as early as 1950, the women independently gathered empirical data on the effects of industrial pollution on human health and the natural environment. They later collaborated with sympathetic scientists and physicians to produce new knowledge that directly challenged corporate and governmental narratives of industrial inevitability. Their achievements were pioneering: they negotiated Japan’s first pollution control agreement between local residents and industry in 1963 (a milestone largely overlooked in post-war historiography), produced a documentary broadcast nationally on NHK in 1965, and by 1969 had secured a region-wide commitment to emission control across Kitakyūshū.
Drawing on oral histories and local archives, this research situates the Give Us Our Blue Skies Back movement within the social and political margins of Japan’s so-called “economic miracle.” It reveals how women in an industrial periphery—far from Tokyo’s political and intellectual centres—developed new forms of civic cooperation and scientific engagement that both anticipated and transcended the environmental movements of the 1970s.
By foregrounding these women’s collective labour, the lecture reconsiders the history of environmental activism, gender, and democracy in post-war Japan. It argues that Tobata’s housewives exemplified a distinctly local mode of civic participation—cooperative rather than confrontational, grounded in everyday life, and driven by moral responsibility and empirical observation. Their story invites a rethinking of the origins of ecological consciousness and the democratisation of science in Japan’s age of industrial modernity.
The third seminar:
Tuesday 3rd March 2026, 5–6:30pm, Vivien Stewart Room
Speaker:
Dr Anna Schrade
Title:
“Give Us Our Blue Skies Back!”: Housewives, Science, and the Struggle for Environmental Justice in Postwar Japan, 1950–1969
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge, Huntingdon Road, Cambridge, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00












