ABSTRACT

Since their development in their current format in the early 1990s as a means to attract female viewers in their twenties, Japanese prime-time television dramas—known commonly as ‘dorama’ 1 —have featured working women. Even police procedurals, medical dramas, and serials based on ‘shōjo manga’ (graphic novels for girls) depict women working outside the home. The dorama most watched by Japanese audiences older than age 25, and those that continue to attract global fans, present the daily lives of independent women working in Tokyo. The protagonists enact fantasies about female professionals while depicting real issues facing the larger generations they represent. Viewers may not want to be these characters, but they can see aspects of themselves in them.