[5] The magazine targeted girls and young women without no political or feminist approach.
"[1] Jogaku Sekai mostly covered fiction and published articles on hobbies of Japanese women, including as tea ceremony and composing waka poetry.
[7] It was one of the early ways in Japan to create community of girls and young women.
[7] Major contributors were Japanese educators and intellectuals such as Nishimura Shigeki and Miwata Masako.
[2] However, with the introduction of other women's magazines such as Shufu no Tomo the sales of Jogaku Sekai dropped dramatically and therefore, it folded in June 1925.