Lexington Books
Pages: 358
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-8075-4 • Hardback • May 2017 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7391-8076-1 • Paperback • March 2018 • $60.99 • (£47.00)
978-0-7391-8077-8 • eBook • May 2017 • $57.50 • (£44.00)
Atsuko Ueda is associate professor of modern Japanese literature in the Department of East Asian Studies at Princeton University.
Michael K. Bourdaghs is professor of modern Japanese literature in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago.
Richi Sakakibara is professor of modern Japanese literature at Waseda University.
Hirokazu Toeda is professor of modern Japanese literature at Waseda University.
Introduction, Atsuko Ueda, Michael K. Bourdaghs, Richi Sakakibara, and Hirokazu Toeda
Part I: The Politics and Literature Debate
Chapter 1: Art, History, Humanity, Honda Shūgo (Translated by Scott Mehl, annotated by Richi Sakakibara and Mariko Takano)
Chapter 2: Second Youth, Ara Masahito (Translated and annotated by William H. Bridges and Junko Yamazaki)
Chapter 3: Who Are the People?, Ara Masahito (Translated by David Boyd, annotated by Richi Sakakibara and Mariko Takano)
Chapter 4: The Responsibility of Writers: A Roundtable Discussion, Ara Masahito, Odagiri Hideo, Sasaki Kiichi, Haniya Yutaka, Hirano Ken, and Honda Shūgo (Translated by Patrick Schwemmer and Tomoko Takeuchi Slutsky, annotated by Noriko Yamaguchi)
Chapter 5: An Antithesis, Hirano Ken (Translated and annotated by Junko Yamazaki, with William H. Bridges, Patrick Schwemmer, Kaori Shiono, Joshua Solomon, Mariko Takano, and Noriko Yamaguchi)
Chapter 6: Establishing Criteria, Hirano Ken (Translated and annotated by Miyabi Goto)
Chapter 7: Politics and Literature, Hirano Ken (Translated and annotated by Sarah Allen, Miyabi Goto, and Mariko Takano)
Chapter 8: The Humanity of Criticism: Concerning Hirano Ken and Ara Masahito, Nakano Shigeharu (Translated and annotated by Joshua Solomon and Kaori Shiono)
Chapter 9: What Is the Primacy of Politics?, Hirano Ken (Translated and annotated by Miyabi Goto and Ron Wilson)
Chapter 10: Politics and Literature II, Hirano Ken (Translated by Nicholas Lambrecht, annotated by Richi Sakakibara and Mariko Takano)
Chapter 11: The Humanity of Criticism II: On the Literary Reaction, et Cetera, Nakano Shigeharu (Translated and annotated by Joshua Solomon and Kaori Shiono)
Part II: Contemporaneous Essays
Chapter 12: Rationed Freedom, Kawakami Tetsutarō (Translated by Atsuko Ueda, annotated by Richi Sakakibara and Mariko Takano)
Chapter 13: The Role of the Writer as National Citizen, Nakano Shigeharu (Translated by Scott W. Aalgaard, annotated by Richi Sakakibara and Mariko Takano)
Chapter 14: The Social Foundations of a New Japanese Literature, Kurahara Korehito (Translated by Kerim Yasar, annotated by Richi Sakakibara and Mariko Takano)
Chapter 15: An Inquiry into War Responsibility in Literature, Odagiri Hideo (Translated by James Dorsey, annotated by James Dorsey and Richi Sakakibara)
Chapter 16: Subjectivity in the Creation of a New Literature: Thoughts for a New Stage, Odagiri Hideo (Translated and annotated by James Dorsey)
Chapter 17: Founding Words: A Manifesto, Ara Masahito, Odagiri Hideo, and Sasaki Kiichi (Translated by James Dorsey, annotated by James Dorsey and Richi Sakakibara)
Chapter 18: On Wifely Literature, Hirano Ken (Translated and annotated by Michael K. Bourdaghs)
Chapter 19: On the New Stars and Violets School, Katō Shūichi (Translated by Doug Slaymaker, annotated by Richi Sakakibara and Mariko Takano)
Chapter 20: The Logic of Delirium, Hanada Kiyoteru (Translated and annotated by J. Keith Vincent)
Chapter 21: A Chart of the Heavenly Bodies: On Copernicus, Hanada Kiyoteru (Translated and annotated by J. Keith Vincent)
Part III: The Afterlives of the Debates
Chapter 22: The Specter of the “Censorship System”: Record of the Chatterley Trial, Nakamura Mitsuo (Translated and annotated by Joshua Solomon and Kaori Shiono)
Chapter 23: The Ideology of the Modern and the Problem of the Ethnic Nation, Takeuchi Yoshimi (Translated and annotated by Sarah Allen)
Chapter 24: Literature under the Occupation, Nakamura Mitsuo (Translated by Atsuko Ueda, annotated by Richi Sakakibara)
This ambitious volume provides a long-missing perspective on Japanese literary production in the vortex of the immediate postwar. Indeed, one could argue we have been hard-pressed to understand the full import of postwar Japanese literature without it. Brought to life in translations by distinguished scholars, these essays allow us at last to situate fiction and poetry of the time in the context of the fraught intellectual debates of a society emerging from fascism. Moreover, in their passion and their sheer detail and nuance, these essays dissolve facile oppositions between communism and individualism, the aesthetic and the political, that have shaped Cold War frameworks for the study of Japan. Rather, they illuminate the commingling of modernism, Marxism, and existentialism in a vein of humanist discourse that could be said to constitute the specificity of Japan in the global postwar.
— Brett de Bary, Cornell University
This collection captures the energy and intensity of the exchange among Japanese writers and literary critics, known as the ‘Literature and Politics Debate’ (1946–47), in which the autonomous status of literature was defended against the primacy of politics that the resurgent Marxist discourse powerfully promoted. The concise introduction and extensive annotations situate this intellectual debate within a larger historical context and offer a nuanced understanding of the controversy. Masterfully translated, the essays in this volume serve as essential sources for understanding the Japanese intellectual climate in the early postwar years.
— Yoshikuni Igarashi, Vanderbilt University