This thesis examines the prewar activities of Ichikawa Fusae, the central figure in the decades-long struggle for women's rights in Japan. Born into a late nineteenth century farming family in central Japan, Ichikawa was scarcely aware as a child that being female would someday limit her aspirations. A highly motivated child and young adult, she expected to earn her slice of the expanding pie of opportunities in Japan's modernizing society and economy. By the time she reached adulthood in the 1910s, however, brakes had been applied to Japan's societal momentum, stopping progress short of the radical change implicit in women's equality. Ichikawa began to perceive that the emphasis on women's traditional role as wives and mothers would inhibi...