ebook img

Anarchist Modernity PDF

440 Pages·2017·19.95 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Anarchist Modernity

Anarchist Modernity Harvard East Asian Monographs 356 Anarchist Modernity Cooperatism and Japanese- Russian Intellectual Relations in Modern Japan Sho Konishi Published by the Harvard University Asia Center Distributed by Harvard University Press Cambridge (Massachusetts) and London 2013 © 2013 by Th e President and Fellows of Harvard College Printed in the United States of America Th e Harvard University Asia Center publishes a monograph series and, in coordination with the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, the Korea Institute, the Reischauer Institute of Japan ese Studies, and other faculties and institutes, administers research projects designed to further scholarly understanding of China, Japan, Vietnam, Korea, and other Asian countries. Th e Center also sponsors projects addressing multidisciplinary and regional issues in Asia. Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Konishi, Sho Anarchist modernity : cooperatism and Japanese- Russian intellectual relations in modern Japan / Sho Konishi. pages cm. — (Harvard East Asian monographs ; 356) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978- 0- 674- 07331- 9 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. Anarchism— Japan—History. 2. Cooperation— Japan—History. 3. Japan— Relations—Russia—History. 4. Russia— Relations—Japan—History. I. Title. HX947.K584 2013 335'.83—dc23 2012050450 Index by Eileen Doherty-Sil Printed on acid- free paper Last fi gure below indicates year of this printing 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 For Anika Contents Illustrations viii Ac know ledg ments ix Abbreviations xii Notes on Style xiii Introduction 1 1 Revoliutsiia Meets Ishin: Th e Emerging Vision of Cooperatist Civilization 29 2 Anarchist Religion: Translation and Conversion beyond Western Modernity 93 3 Th e Nonwar Movement in the Russo- Japanese War: Th e Invention of the People without the State 142 4 Th e History Slide 209 5 Translingual World Order: Language without Culture 258 6 Nature in Culture, Culture in Nature: Phagocytes, Dung Beetles, and the Cosmos 296 Epilogue: Culture Turned Upside Down 329 Bibliography 353 Index 385 Illustrations 1.1 Lev Mechnikov in samurai dress, circa 1876 49 1.2 Tattooed laborer in Meiji Japan 52 2.1 Fragment of a church mural in the village of Tazov, Kursk Province, Russ ia 94 2.2 Tokutomi Roka with Lev Tolstoy and Tolstoy’s daughter Aleksandra Tolstaya, Iasnaia Poliana, Rus sia, 1906 134 3.1 Th e “society of cliques” pushing a peasant into war. Cartoon in Heimin shimbun, January 17, 1904 163 3.2 Yamamoto Kanae’s Ryōfu (Fisherman), published in Myōjō, July 1904 170 3.3 Sleepy fi sherman. Usen cartoon from Hikari, October 15, 1905 173 3.4 Workers at rest. Usen cartoon from Heimin shimbun, April 10, 1905 174 3.5 Farmers relaxing. Usen cartoon from Heimin shimbun, January 24, 1905 174 3.6 Monkey Trainer from Tōwa Shinpō. Usen postcard, 1908 176 3.7 Transnational heimin. Cartoon from Heimin shimbun, January 17, 1905 186 3.8 “Eternal Rest.” Cartoon in Sudzilovskii- Russel’s Nagasaki newspaper Volia 6 (May 7, 1906) 202 4.1 Social Studies Circle led by Arishima Takeo 250 5.1 Vasilii Eroshenko wearing a Rus sian peasant’s blouse in Japan, 1916 286 5.2 Nakamuraya sweetshop, 1909 289 Ac know ledg ments Th e following archives, libraries, and institutions w ere especially helpful and generous in off ering assistance and materials for this project: the State Museum of L. N. Tolstoy Manuscripts Department and Library; the Historical Library Periodicals Collection and East Asia Collection in Moscow; the State Archive of the Rus sian Federation; the Rus sian State Archive of Literature and Art; the Hokkaido University Slavic Research Center Library; the Seki Kansai Memorial Museum and Archive; the Hoover Institution of War, Revolution and Peace Archives at Stanford University; the Niseko’s Arishima Takeo Memorial Museum Archive; the Japan Esperanto Institute Library; the Japa nese Foreign Ministry Archive; the Hokkaido Municipal Archive; Hokkaido University North- ern Studies Special Collections; the National Diet Library Newspaper and Journal Collection; the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies Cen- tennial Collection; the Regenstein Library of the University of Chicago; and the Oxford Bodleian Japa nese Library. Th is book has also relied on archival treas ures and other materials preserved by the following institutions: the Kanagawa Prefectural Li- brary of Modern Literature; the Tokutomi Roka Museum Collection; the Meiji Newspaper and Journal Collection of Tokyo University; the National Archive of Japan; Haverford College Quaker and Special Col- lections; the Miyazawa Kenji Museum; the Ogawa Usen Memorial Mu- seum; the Setagaya Literature Museum; the Hokkaido Museum of Lit- erature; the Museum of Modern Literature in Hakodate; the Yamamoto Kanae Museum; the Tokyo Municipal Library, Archive Section; the x Ac know ledg ments Franz Boas Papers Collection of the American Philosophical Society; and the Chicago Field Museum, Archival Section. Th is work’s incorporation of diverse fi elds of study and geographic areas would not have been possible without the generous funding of the Fulbright-H ays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Fellowship, the Esperantic Studies Foundation, the Social Science Research Council/ Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, the University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign Research Board, the U.S. Library of Congress Flor- ence Tan Moeson Fellowship, the Association for Asian Studies NEAC grants, the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Chicago, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. I am very grateful for their support. I would also like to acknowledge the Reischauer Institute of Japan ese Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; the Center for Japan ese Studies of the Russ ian Academy of Sciences, Mos- cow, Rus sia; and the Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido University in Japan, which kindly extended fellowship affi liations to me. My article “Reopening the ‘Opening of Japan,’ ” Th e American His- torical Review 112, no. 1 (2007): 101–1 30 appears in some portions of Chapter 1 with permission from the University of Chicago Press and the American Historical Association. My article “Translingual World Order,” Journal of Asian Studies 72, no. 1 (2013): 91–1 14, an earlier version of Chapter 5, appears with permission from Cambridge University Press. Parts of “Tolstoian Religion in Meiji Japan,” pp. 233– 266 in Converting Cultures: Religion, Ideology, and Transformations of Modernity, edited by Dennis Washburn and A. Kevin Reinhart, 2007, appear with the per- mission of Brill. Th e earlier conceptual grasp of the signifi cance of the Nonwar Movement found in “Th e Absence of Portsmouth in an Early Twentieth-C entury Japan ese Imagination of Peace” in Th e Treaty of Portsmouth and its Legacies, pp. 98– 105, edited by Steven J. Ericson and Allen Hockley (2008), appears in Chapter 3 with the permission of the University Press of New En gland. Finally, I wish to express my appreciation to a number of individuals. I thank Harriet Shelley, the only one to have read this book throughout its various stages of metamorphosis. She off ered countless questions and criticisms from the eyes of a nonspecialist. Th is volume is the result of my attempt to answer and respond to them. I wish to express my gratitude to Professors Tetsuo Najita and Sheila Fitzpatrick of the Department of

Description:
Anarchist modernity : cooperatism and Japanese- Russian intellectual relations in modern. Japan / Sho Konishi 1860s, multiple thoughts and values from outside Japan came in contact. 3. Alexander their practices by governments and their intelligence agencies on both sides of the Sea of Japan.
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.