Tag:gender roles

Kelantan, Where Women And Men Cannot Mingle

The organisers of a recent food and sales expo in Kelantan did not expect their event to make national headlines. Yet in early 2026,...

Why Many Asians Feel Embarrassed To Use Condoms

Across Southeast Asia, condoms are widely recognised as effective tools for preventing pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections, yet their everyday acceptance among adults remains...

From Poetry to Insult: How Asians Call Sex Workers

Across Asia, sex work has long existed in the shadows of law, morality, and polite conversation. One way societies manage that discomfort is through...

The Diplomatic Genius Of Asian ‘Aunties’

In the popular imagination, the Asian “auntie” is a creature of judgement: sharp-eyed, gossip-prone, deeply invested in other people’s marriages, weight gain and moral...

How Young Indians Are Redefining Modern Dating

Dating in India today is quieter than the stereotypes suggest. Less dramatic than Bollywood montages, less rebellious than parental anxieties, and far more deliberate...

On Tokyo Trains, Men Are Groped Too

Tokyo’s rush-hour trains are famous for their efficiency—and infamous for how tightly they pack human bodies together. In that enforced intimacy, groping has thrived...

Asian Men’s Top Fantasy? The Woman Next Door

If porn reflected raw appetite, Asian screens would be crowded with excess: sculpted bodies, theatrical sex, relentless novelty. Instead, what dominates much of Asian...

The Radical Feminism of Studio Ghibli’s Girls

For decades, viewers searching for strong female characters in animation have found an unexpected answer not in Hollywood franchises but in the quiet, wind-swept...
Auntie Spices It Out
Commentary

When a Woman Accepts To Be Excluded

February 4, 2026

I have a complicated relationship with tradition. I respect it when it holds stories, skills, beauty, memory. I have far less patience when it is used as a velvet rope to keep women quietly outside, smiling politely while men perform rituals about strength, purity, and power. So when Japan’s prime minister calmly announced that she would not step onto the dohyō (sumo ring) and would not challenge the rule excluding women, my first reaction was not shock. It was a tired sigh. Ah yes. That tradition. Let’s be honest: this...
Commentary

Kelantan, Where Women And Men Cannot Mingle

February 4, 2026

I am not going to Kelantan. Not for a conference, not for a festival, not even for “cultural curiosity.” Life is short, my passport has stamps to earn, and I have zero interest in spending my money in a place where my body, my clothes, my laughter, and my proximity to other human beings are treated as public risks to be managed. Let’s be clear: this is not about faith. I have worked with Muslim feminists, queer Muslims, and religious scholars across Asia who fight—often bravely—for dignity, consent, and justice...
Commentary

Urban Voters Push Gender, Identity, Sex Work Agenda

February 3, 2026

If you ask me who I would vote for in this election, I’ll disappoint you by saying this first: I don’t vote for logos, slogans, or smiling men in white shirts. I vote for signals. For tone. For courage. For who dares to say certain words out loud without flinching. I would vote for the people who stopped whispering. For decades, Thai politics treated women, gender-diverse people and sex workers like embarrassing relatives at a family wedding—present, useful, but never acknowledged in public. Suddenly, during this campaign, some candidates have...
Commentary

Women Rank India’s Cities by Safety

February 3, 2026

Spicy Auntie has read the survey, nodded grimly, sighed loudly, and poured herself another cup of coffee. Because honestly, none of this is shocking — and that’s exactly the problem. Every time India releases a “women’s safety” ranking, people argue about methodology, defend their favourite city, or complain that it makes the country “look bad.” What nobody wants to admit is that women already know these rankings by heart. We carry them in our bodies. In our routes. In the way we stop answering messages after dark so nobody knows...
Commentary

“No Seniors”: Restaurants Choose Customers by Age

February 3, 2026

I read about these age-restricted restaurants and bars and my first reaction, honestly, was not outrage. It was recognition. Because this is Japan doing what it always does best: taking a social tension everyone feels but pretends not to notice, and turning it into a laminated sign at the door. Let’s be clear. This is not really about noise. This is about space. Who gets to occupy it, who feels entitled to it, and who is politely — or not so politely — asked to step aside. Japan is aging...
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