Japan’s Epic History Of Discrimination Against The Mustache

If you ever go to Japan, you’ll come to realize that almost all men, especially salarymen, don’t have mustaches (or facial hair for that matter). Although shaving your mustache can sometimes cause trouble (watch Koichi’s emotional song about a pitiable soccer player who was suspended because of his shaving cream), having a mustache can be problematic in Japan. If you decided to go to work with a mustache your boss might not just give you a simple slap on the wrist, he might actually fire you. Sad, but true.

But how can this be? In a modern country such as Japan, shouldn’t it be a society in which one can look past another’s facial hair without judging (or firing you?). I’d like to take you on a mustache-canoe journey through the river that is the history of how facial hair functions in Japan, past and present. I’d also like to educate you on mustaches in general in Japan, just in case you end up in a heated mustache-related argument. Nobody is going to be teased about falling flattop on your facial hair on my watch.

Japanese Mustache Vocabulary

mustache

Unlike English, Japanese has only one word for each type of facial hair, excluding the eyebrows: HIGE. Lucky you! You’ve just learned how to say mustache, beard, sideburns, and whiskers in Japanese, all at once. If you found it to be more confusing than “lucky”, don’t worry, we use a different kanji for each hige: 髭 for mustache, 鬚 for cheek hair, and 髯 for the chin. Furthermore, you can also say 口髭 (kuchi-hige/mouth-hair), 頬鬚 (hoo-hige/cheek-hair), and 顎髯 (ago-hige/chin-hair), if you prefer to specify.

Just as a note, to save some word-space in this article, from here on out I’ll use “hige” to quickly refer to mustaches, beards, sideburns, (and whiskers). So, please don’t get confused whenever you see the word “hige”. Memorize the meaning right now!!!

Let’s break down the words for each HIGE style: Mustache a.k.a. kuchi-hige is facial hair grown just above the upper lip and is the most common type of hige. For this popular mustache, there are three main styles. In Japanese, the “handlebar mustache” a.k.a. the “Kaiser mustache” is カイゼル髭(kaizeru-hige), toothbrush mustache is ちょび髭 (chobi-hige), and the pencil-thin mustache is 泥鰌髭(dojou-hige).

There are other types of hige out there besides these, of course. Let’s take a look at some of the more interesting ones.

Ago-hige is the collection of facial hair grown on the chin, upper lip, lower cheeks, and neck. The most famous style of this is most likely to be the “goatee” and is translated into 山羊髯 (yagi-hige/goat hige).

This can be taken a step further, too. Nothing says “I love Japan” more than trimming the hair on your chin into the shape of Mt. Fuji. Not surprisingly, this is called 富士髯 (Fuji-hige).

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Hoo-hige is facial hair grown on the sides of the face and in front of the ears. It’s not exactly the same thing as sideburns, however. In Japanese “sideburns” get separated into two different categories. (Remember, “hoo” means cheek so hoo-hige is the part of the sideburn that starts extending outward over your cheek.) The part of the sideburn that is directly beside your ear is called もみあげ(momiage). It’s difficult to distinguish exactly where momiage end and where hoo-hige begin, so some people just call them 長いもみあげ (nagai-momiage), which means “long momiage.”

Another very common hige style is the combination of the mustache and the goatee, which is called ラウンド髭 (round-hige), 囲み (kakomi), or カールおじさんの髭 (karl-ojisan-no-hige).

karl-no-ojiisan-hige

And finally, if you have hige that isn’t trimmed at all and just looks like messy stubble, it’s called 無精髭 (bushou-hige/laziness-hige). Additionally, the “5 o’clock shadow” is called 青髭 (ao-hige/blue-hige). As you can see, for any variation or combination of mustaches, beards, and/or sideburns, we say “hige” and use “髭.”

Japanese Mustache History

hige

Photo by mils-cfg

In Japan, from the medieval period to the beginning of Edo period, if you were a Samurai, you had to have hige. A Samurai without hige was made fun of. Thus, those who couldn’t grow much hige or had thin ones, such as Hideyoshi Toyotomi, used fake hige.

When the Edo shogunate entered a calm stage and became a “civilian government” called 文治政治 (bunchi-seiji), showing a fighting spirit came to be regarded as having the intention of rebelling. Since hige represents the samurai’s fighting spirit, feudal lords started shaving off their hige and left only their 髷 (mage) which is the long hair at the back of the head tied into a knot or bun. Another symbol of a samurai, the 月代 (sakayaki) which is the shaved part on the top of the head, remained during this period. This style was used until the middle of the 17th century. The government ended up banning people from having hige for the reason that hige could corrupt public morals, so all samurai had to shave off their hige, as well. They made one exception, however. People who had scars on their faces were granted permission to grow hige in order to hide their scars. Thus, Morihito Yamayoshi (a.k.a Shinpachirou Yamayoshi or Shinpachi) shaved his hige, though he doesn’t have his hige in the moe-anime game called “ChuShingura46+1”, since all Samurai characters are girls in the game.

In the second half of the 17th century, having a clean-shaven face became the standard among Japanese civilians. Meanwhile, in Hokkaido, Japan’s indigenous group called Ainu still had hige but didn’t have mage (the knot at the top of the head). Therefore, during the Edo-period, the homeland of the Ainu, 蝦夷地(Ezo-chi/Yezo), was regarded as a land of savages, in large part due to them having hige. This “hige discrimination” is considered to be one of the initial reasons that people started to harbor contempt for the Ainu.

There is also an offensive and insulting term for foreigners, 毛唐(ketou), which was created to spite foreigners with hige. 毛 means hair and 唐 means Tang Dynasty. The word 毛唐 was originally intended for Chinese people thought later it came to denote Westerners.

Speaking of Westerners, in and around the 18th century, hige became really popular in Victorian England and spread throughout Europe. That influence reached men of high status in Japan during the Meiji-era (that’s after the anti-mustache Shogunate was overthrown, 1868-1912 AD) and so they started growing their hige again. Gaishi Nagaoka, an officer at Military Staff College in Tokyo, was one of them and he grew his mustache to an astounding 70cm (27.5inch) from end to end. His mustache was called the プロペラ髭 (propeller-hige) and Nagaoka was very proud of it.

Gaishi_Nagaoka

During the Taishou era (1912-1926 AD), some people still wore the toothbrush mustache or the Ronald-Coleman-like mustache called コールマン髭 (Coleman-hige). However, a new style without a mustache called MOBO (Modern Boy) became popular and the hige fever cooled down all the way until the militaristic Shouwa era (1926–1989) when the hige-boom came back (but didn’t last that long). After the wars, safety razors spread around the country and shaving hige became the respectable, and respectful, style for salarymen all through the post-war reconstruction period.

Hige In The Contemporary Japan

Nowadays, though the trendiness of hige is gradually increasing, even to the point that there is now a popular Hige Dance, there are still far more clean-shaven Japanese men than those with hige. I guess it’s because the old “Hige=Bad” mentality still lingers in many minds.

Across Japan, a general rule of employment stipulates that you must not have hige. This is particularly evident in the following industries: banking, investment, insurance, railway, airline, bus, taxi, retail, restaurant, and hotel. Companies make such rules because the firing, suspension of, demotion of a person, or reducing their salary for having hige is an infringement on personal rights. An employee must be given fair warning that having hige is against company policy.

In fact, some incidents have even gone all the way to the court system. For example, a postman named Noboru Nakamura had to hire a lawyer to fight for the right to keep his hige against Japan Post’s 2004 grooming regulation. Nakamura wasn’t the only postman who felt troubled by the regulation. Another postman named Hideki Shiba brought his case against Japan Post to court and won because the regulation was introduced after he had started working there. A taxi driver won his case that he took to court, as well. Those cases (裁判/saiban) are called 髭裁判(hige-saiban).

This means one very simple thing: it’s very possible to get fired for having facial hair. Oh, and don’t forget to lawyer up.

It all sounds far too serious for something as little (and natural) has hige, but as the saying たかが髭、されど髭 (takaga hige, saredo hige) goes, “it’s just hige, but it could be very important, as well”. And indeed it can be. As I am a female, I don’t understand how men feel about their hige. If I found a thick hige on my face, I’d remove it immediately. However, while writing this article I’ve learned about how difficult it was to have hige from a historical context. I’ve also learned how important hige can be for some men, and I’d like to learn more. I’d love to hear the passionate opinions of the “Hige-man”. I guess we all want to, so keep an eye out for the next article in which I interview a Japanese salary man with a doozie of a mustache. What made him start growing his mustache? Did he need to fight his boss in order to keep it? It’s him against society. You don’t want to miss it!

Bonus Wallpapers!

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  • Mami

    Yaaaay! ( ˙灬˙ ) Higeeeey!

  • Christopher 並天道虫

    I don’t like hige! D:

  • AmeiurusNebulosus

    Haha, awesome article!

    I can’t wait to take my curly handlebar over there.

  • Farah Hisham

    That illustration reminds me of the Sabotage series by DenpaConnection lol or was is Dempa?

  • Castle

    I love my yagi-hige,would be very hard for me to give it up

  • super_notnormal

    I love my hige, but this article makes me worried that people will hate me for it. I can’t go two day without hige magically appearing on my face!

  • linda lombardi

    Fuji-hige!

    I never expected an article about mustaches could be so interesting.

  • GabeMoist

    カイゼル髭は好きだから剃るつもりがない。

  • Dorotheus

    I have a hige that didn’t have a name before, but its been called anything from a fu-man-chu to a goatee, and a soulpatch. Its a strip no thicker than a pencil, that comes from the tuck of my lip, and flows about 3 and a half centimeters off the tip of my chin. Everything else is clean shaven. I’d like to take the time to name it in light of this article and call it the 川髭 (Kawa-Hige), The River.

    I’ve kept the style since I was about 16, and I have shaven it many times just to give it new life.

  • Lava Yuki

    I know my college has a rule against facial hair on men. It says “all male students must be cleanly shaven, and designer stubble etc. is not permitted”.. something like that. But having a moustache is totally uncool here in ireland, no one has one cept maybe mainland europeans or tourists.

  • Mami

    Oh you don’t? :P I like ago-hige:P hehe

  • Mami

    Awesome! How long is your handlebar?? ( ˙灬˙ )

  • Mami

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qgBnhVeXosM

    It seems to be Dempa ( ˙灬˙ )

  • Mami

    Nice! You don’t need to give it up. Just keep it up!

  • Mami

    Aww…Higefully you’ll be fine. ( ˙灬˙ ) What kind of hige do you have?? ( ˙灬˙ )

  • Mami

    Yeah, Linda. I didn’t expect that either! ( ˙灬˙ )

    This article was supposed to be just an introduction for the interview of Hige-man, but turned out to be one article by itself because there are a lot to mention about mustache! lol ( ˙灬˙ ) ビックリヒゲクリ( ˙灬˙ )

  • Mami

    カイゼル髭、かっこいいですね。でも、他の髭にも挑戦してみませんか?富士髯とか ( ˙灬˙ )♥

  • Mami

    いいですね、カイゼル髭!でも、他の髭にも挑戦してみてはどうでしょうか。富士髯とか… ( ˙灬˙ )♥

  • http://fripp.bandcamp.com/ ultracrepe

    すみません! i really like your drawings, your style is endearingly communicative ^>^ i know you must be a busy lady but i want to ask you, if you’ve ever got the chance, to make a drawing for me, for the background of my music page: fripp.bandcamp.com .. this is my guitar: http://i.imgur.com/WDa6KZx.jpg .. this is me: http://i.imgur.com/hvsdbEd.jpg .. and me again: http://i.imgur.com/vOwKmja.jpg .. much bad hige, i know. it doesn’t even have to feature me or the guitar, really! i would be honored to have even a simple doodle by your hand ^>^ please forgive me if it’s totally inappropriate to make this request here. すみません!

  • Mami

    Oh, so there is a mustache discrimination in Ireland too, eh? Poor hige-men in Ireland.
    Do you think some men have been upset with that? Are there some hige-saiban (court case) against such rules like we do in Japan? ( ˙灬˙ )

  • Mami

    Nice I like 川髯! Is it like Chin Puff in English?? チンパフ髯 ( ˙灬˙ )

  • linda lombardi

    You never know where research will lead… and ( ˙灬˙ ) looks like walrus mustache.

  • A-thrice

    I don’t even know what my hige is…It’s everything at once. Just a full beard (Full-hige??), which covers the mustache, cheek, chin, neck and sideburns area. Well, whatever this monstrosity on my face is, it holds a special spot in my heart (And my face).

  • Lava Yuki

    Well, its seen as unclean and poorly groomed. And if a young guy were to have it, he’s probably be teased by all his friends or something. And I’ve never seen Irish men with beards or moustaches. But no court cases or anything. With regards to discrimination, technically job discrimination is not allowed, but people with huge beards, tattoos, multiple piercing etc. have a harder time, and it’s almost impossible to prove it in the first place for a court case to happen.

  • Mami

    Nice pictures ultracrape! Do you mean that you like my Tohige drawing? ( ˙灬˙ )arigato
    But I guess you are talking about Tofugu’s general drawings! And they are done by Aya-chan♥ So you need to ask her! :D

  • super_notnormal

    Right now, I have blue-hige but I normally roll about with a advanced round-hige. I love my hige so do you think that maybe I will acknowledge for obtain such an amazing hige?

  • Mami

    Umm…it may be called “moja-moja-hige”.

    http://www.crayonhouse.co.jp/shop/e/e13xmsZ03/

  • Mami

    Aha♥ Walrus mustache… セイウチ髭♥kawaii

  • Mami

    I see. Thank you for sharing the information about hige in your country. It’s very very interesting:D

  • Mami

    Advanced round-hige…you mean, carl-ojisan-no-hige? ( ˙灬˙ ) hehe
    Sure! You’ll be acknowledged for that, if it’s carl-ojisan-no-hige♥

  • AmeiurusNebulosus

    Uhhh this long, never took the measuring tape to it before :o

  • AmeiurusNebulosus

    Uhh this long, never taken a measuring tape to it before :o

  • super_notnormal

    Yes and no but the carl-ojisan-no-hige is sort of close to it so I will lean more toward the yes! (^,,,^)/

  • http://www.twitter.com/christaran Chris Taran

    I have a beard and love it! Wouldn’t even consider working somewhere that would try and make me shave it.

    Crazy how such a natural thing can be frowned down upon.

  • Silver Sabrewulf

    Very interesting article. I never knew about the cultural aspects of hige in Japan. I just sort of wondered why so few Japanese people have facial hair, haha. In western Europe, most people just do what they want. Even company presidents may have stubble, a mustache, a goatee or even a full beard (provided they’re well kept). The older you are the more acceptable it is. Sort of like a badge of honor, I guess.

    Mine would probably fall under the ‘lazy-hige’ category. :P (https://media.licdn.com/mpr/mpr/shrink_200_200/p/4/000/17b/153/25adb8f.jpg)

    The worst part is that my facial hair is a different color… but if I go with a completely clean-shaven face, I look like a 14-year-old boy (half my age, basically).

  • IndigoSelvedge

    Wow, I’m glad you wrote this article when you did! I have an interview for a job in Japan next week and I was wondering whether or not I should shave my beard. So thank you for that!

    I actually started growing my beard when I was last in Japan, three years ago. I found Japanese disposable razors wouldn’t cut through my thick beard, so I just stopped shaving. Oddly enough, I now use a カミソリ when I do end up shaving…

  • Christopher 並天道虫

    It’s about the only possible hair I can grow! :P I’m quite lucky to not have to worry about mustache hair.

  • Mami

    Just in case you like the Tohige kind. a little quick one though.

  • Mami

    (^,,,^)/ Aww nice kaomoji!

  • Mami

    you may be the propeller length then!

  • Mami

    Good(^,,,^)/

  • Mami

    Oh! You have to be careful not to cut your skin then!
    I’m glad that this article helps you♪Good luck your interview♥ ( ˙灬˙ )

  • Mami

    Yeah. It’s pretty crazy, isn’t it? But, according to Lava Yuki’s comment, apparently Ireland men shave hige, too. Interesting.

  • Mami

    I can tell that you without hige look like a 14-year-old boy. Even with hair, you look like so. The same age as me, by the way:P

  • http://www.twitter.com/christaran Chris Taran

    It is interesting, I’d no idea Irish men were like that. I’m American, and while most do seem to shave, a large quantity of us have some form of facial hair these days. And even those that don’t have any right now have usually experimented with it at some point!

  • Mami

    Nice pictures ultracrape! Do you mean that you like my Tohige drawing? ( ˙灬˙ )arigato

    But I guess you are talking about Tofugu’s general drawings! And they are done by Aya-chan♥ So you’d need to ask her! :D

    Just in case you like the Tohige kind, I made this. A little quick one though.

  • http://fripp.bandcamp.com/ ultracrepe

    I do like your Tohige drawing! and I thought you were illustrator of the other drawings, too ^>^ but I am wondering if YOU would draw something for my website.

  • http://fripp.bandcamp.com/ ultracrepe

    yes!! that’s awesome!!

  • AmeiurusNebulosus

    Oh yea, it’s going to keep going until it becomes dangerous to walk beside me for bystanders!

  • Stanton Barbas

    I… I cannot grow a Hige. This has always saddened me, because i cannot think of something more masculine than a puff of hair on an upper lip. (That sounded weird)