Sukeban

Sukeban
Years active1960s–1970s
CountryJapan
InfluencedSeinen manga,[1] Pinky Violence films,[2] all-girl Bōsōzoku gangs[3]

Sukeban (スケバン/助番) is a Japanese term meaning 'delinquent girl', and the female equivalent to the male banchō in Japanese culture. The usage of the word sukeban refers to either the leader of a girl gang or the entire gang itself,[4][better source needed] and is not used to refer to any one member of a girl gang.[5]

The word sukeban was originally used by delinquents, but has been used by the general population to describe the subculture since 1972. Sukeban were formed as a direct result of male gangs' refusal to accept female members, consequently the term has come to refer to the massive movement that brought feminism to public attention at a time when men of the yakuza were thriving.[citation needed]

Sukeban reportedly first appeared in Japan during the 1960s, presenting themselves as the female equivalent to the banchō gangs, which were composed mostly of men. During the 1970s, as banchō gangs began to die out, sukeban girl gangs began to rise in number. Gangs were initially small groups of girls sneaking cigarettes in school bathrooms, but eventually grew in numbers, as did their level of criminality.[citation needed] These gangs were commonly associated by violence and shop-lifting. Gangs ranged in size from Tokyo's United Shoplifters group, comprising roughly 80 members, to the Kanto Women Delinquent Alliance, rumored to have had around 20,000 members. [citation needed] Criminal activities and violence of the girl gangs in Japan reached such a high that sketches used to identify them in Japanese police pamphlets in the 1980s described aspects of their fashion as "omens of downfall".[6]

  1. ^ Schmidt-Rees, Hannah (16 February 2019). "Sukeban - The Forgotten Story of Japans Girl Gangs". Perspex. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  2. ^ Gravili, Mattia (27 December 2023). "SUKEBAN: Japan's 70s Delinquent Girl Gangs". Yokogao. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  3. ^ Healy, Claire Marie (5 November 2015). "Remembering Japan's badass 70s schoolgirl gangs". Dazed. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  4. ^ "The Japanese Slang Jiko".
  5. ^ Yonekawa, Akihiko. Beyond Polite Japanese: A Dictionary of Japanese Slang and Colloquialisms, 2001, pages 26–27. ISBN 978-4-7700-2773-3.
  6. ^ Cite error: The named reference Womansword was invoked but never defined (see the help page).