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Title: Trans-Imperial Anarchism Subtitle: Cooperatist communalist theory and practice in imperial Japan Date: 06 May 2020 Source: *Modern Asian Studies*, Volume 55, Issue 2, March 2021, pp. 552â586. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X19000337 Authors: Robert Kramm Topics: Anti-imperialism, imperialism, Japan, Japanese anarchism Published: 2022-02-19 04:26:45Z
This article investigates anarchist theory and practice in 1920s and 1930s imperial Japan. It deliberately focuses on concepts and interventions by a rather unknown groupâthe NĆson Seinen Shaâto highlight a global consciousness even among those anarchists in imperial Japan who did not become famous for their cosmopolitan adventures. Their trans-imperial anarchism emerged from a modern critique of the present and engagement with cooperatist communalist ideas and experiences in Asia, Russia, and Western Europe. Anarchists theorized and implemented new forms of living that challenged the forces of capitalism, imperialism, and increasing militarism. In doing so, they simultaneously positioned themselves against established conservative and fascist agrarianism as well as Marxist dogmatism in the socialist movement. Despite their repression by the imperial state, they offered a radical, universalist, yet pragmatic way of being in autarkic farming village communes that corresponded with similar ideas and movements worldwide.
Anarchism has been a global phenomenon. Anarchist theory and practice have had the global aim of liberation, through overcoming capitalism and state power as well as any other form of authority, hierarchy, and exploitation. Its vision is to allow people to govern themselves autonomously without coercion, based on individual freedom and mutually shared interests. Most anarchists, anarchist thought, and anarchist movements worldwide have been embedded within networks that cross national, imperial, and regional borders, yet they have been simultaneously intertwined with local and historically specific contacts and contexts. For the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, in particular, Benedict Anderson has mapped âthe gravitational force of anarchismâ,[1] demonstrating how dissidents at the margins of empire appropriated and used the new, accelerated, and also accessible, means of travelling and publishing for their revolutionary cause. Of course, many anarchist projects in various regions of the world have been part of a longer history of statelessness, undermining the hegemonic notion of state administration as the only modern historic form.[2] For other (mostly non-European) countries and colonies, at a time when the whole world was affected by capitalism, imperialism, and colonialism, anarchism evolved as a new and attractive political theory and practice for anti-authoritarian and anti-colonial social movements. Studies on the Indian anti-colonial Ghadar movement and networks in the Eastern Mediterranean, for instance, have unearthed the global connections of activist groups by tracking the trails of non-white radicals who travelled the world in their anti-colonial struggle.[3] Worldwide anarchism was grounded in anarchist networks that âcomprised of formal and informal structures, [âŠ] facilitated doctrinal diffusion, financial flows, transmission of information and symbolic practices, and acts of solidarityâ, as Lucien van der Walt and Steven Hirsch have convincingly argued.[4] Despite local variations, anarchist theory and practice were undeniably significant and globally connectedâin Asia and beyond.[5]
In the case of imperial Japan, despite prevailing stereotypes of the alleged obedience of the Japanese people, scholars have also highlighted Japanâs rich tradition of anarchism. Arguably the most prominent Japanese anarchists, KĆtoku ShĆ«sui (1871â1911) and Ćsugi Sakae (1885â1923) elaborated highly sophisticated analyses and critiques of capitalism and imperialism; in doing so, they looked beyond Japan with a global vision and integrated the Japanese empire into the world system.[6] Classical studies have debated to what extent their critique was grounded in their experiences abroad, underscoring, for instance, how KĆtoku, Ćsugi, and other anarchists were influenced by ideas such as Christian socialism and how much they contributed to anarchist theory and practice in Japan.[7] More recent scholarship highlights border- crossing networks that operated in multiple directions, with sometimes contingent circumstances that contributed significantly to the development of anarchism in East Asia. By exploring the routes of anarchist Ishikawa SanshirĆ (1876â1956), Nadine Willems has shown that highly mobile individuals built networks that shaped âideas of social changeâ by crossing imperial Japanâs borders.[8] Studies focusing on Korean and Chinese students who received their education in Japan and returned to Korea and China similarly underscore the building of anarchist networks beyond the borders of imperial Japan and throughout East Asia.[9] Indeed, studies on anarchist movements in Japan and other parts of the world have demonstrated that the mobility and contacts of anarchist and other radical activists in transnational networksâwhether in the form of study groups, labour unions, and publishing collectivesâfacilitated the impact of the movement.[10]
Although this article builds on these insights, it explores the global or, more precisely, the trans-imperial connectedness of anarchism in imperial Japan from a different angle. It analyses a set of writings from an anarchist communist group called NĆson Seinen Sha (Farming Village Youth Association) in the late 1920s and early 1930s. The NĆson Seinen Sha was a rather small and socially diverse group of anarchists. Its most prominent members were probably Miyazaki Akira (1900â1977) and Suzuki Yasuyuki (1903â1970). The group aimed at building a libertarian society by establishing autarkic, cooperatist, communalist farming villages that were independent of state power, the capitalist market, and imperialist expansion. It started its project on the outskirts of Nagano prefecture in 1931. This article deliberately focuses on one such local group to underscore the global dimension of imperial Japanâs anarchist thought, even among those proponents who did not become famous for their extensive cosmopolitan adventures. It uses trans-imperialism as a perspective that acknowledges the early twentieth century as a historical moment when, in Japan as elsewhere, empiresâand not the nation-stateâwere the predominant framework of socio-political organization.[11] Even fascism, arguably the most nationalistic contemporary global current, which is usually perceived as being solely preoccupied with centring itself in the world, âsubsumed imperialism ⊠and took over processes and institutions that originated outside, or prior to, its own historical momentâ.[12] As Jane Burbank and Frederick Cooper have put it, âempires and their interactions shaped the context in which people gauged their political possibilities, pursued their ambitions, and envisioned their societiesâ.[13] That said, despite the multiple forms of systematic exploitation, discrimination, and violence inherent to them, empires were also framing the channels of communication and room-to-manoeuvre of its dissidents. Trans-imperial anarchism acknowledges this historical moment and indicates that anarchistsâ struggle against state authority targeted an imperial state, which they wanted to overcome. Their vision of liberation and solidarity with oppressed people was global and reached beyond Japanâs imperial boundaries into other imperial formations. Moreover, Japanese anarchists experienced peculiar circumstances: they were confronted with a repressive authoritarian regime, but also found themselves in a âdouble bindâ situation in which they were simultaneously subjugated to Western hegemony yet were themselves positioned within a non-white imperial centre.[14] Imperial Japanâs anarchistsâ radical analysis, critique, and solutions to their immediate historical situation; the tension between the West and non-West that emerged in Japanese anarchistsâ critical reading of revolutionary theory; as well as their appreciation and discussion of non-Western cooperatist communalist concepts are at the centre of this article. Trans-imperial anarchism thus means anarchists fighting to overthrow imperial state authority as well as crossing imperial borders by reading, criticizing, and speaking about anarchist theory and practice in imperial formations outside the Japanese empire, while simultaneously navigating within and beyond the imperial boundaries of their own historical moment and position.
The article begins by placing the NĆson Seinen Sha within Japanâs anarchist movement and introduces the groupâs understanding of cooperatist communalism and its vision of a better future. The next section integrates the NĆson Seinen Sha into the historical context of early twentieth-century imperial Japanâs agrarianist discourse. Along with the writings of the NĆson Seinen Sha, the article illustrates the groupâs radical criticism and concepts of cooperatist communalism, which includes underscoring its embrace of science, such as an anarchist reading of evolutionary theory and social organization as the basis for its analysis and critique. This demonstrates that anarchism, all-too-often disqualified as being primitive, anti-modern, irrational, and anti-science, could very well be grounded in scientific reasoning and develop a concise revolutionary theory and practice.[15] Finally, the article puts imperial Japanese anarchist thought around cooperatist communalism into conversation with radical utopian community projects in other imperial settings in Asia. Unfortunately, farmersâ responses to the NĆson Seinen Shaâs engagement are not documented and thus their voices are silent in this article.[16] Yet the NĆson Seinen Shaâs texts stress the trans-imperial, indeed global, scope of its theory and practice. Its analysis of the historical moment and its own position, its acknowledgement of revolutionary movements and thought worldwide, and its contribution to a global struggle all developed within a âglobal consciousnessâ. Such consciousness, as Sebastian Conrad and Dominik Sachsenmaier have argued, was fostered by educated metropolitan elites initiating global channels of communication in the late nineteenth century. The circulation of knowledge through newspapers and journals, for instance, constituted a new way of perceiving the world. This does not necessarily mean that every reported event was of global importance, but that a global consciousness âaffected a general mentalityâ, which âalso framed the context in which specific political measures were discussedâ.[17] Half a century later, this also applied to Japanese anarchist circles. Cooperatist communalist thought and practice in imperial Japan resonated with similar global ideas and movements, ranging from anarchist communes to intentional communities, vegetarian colonies, and socialist kibbutzim.[18] This was not a coincidence. The members of the NĆson Seinen Sha were well aware of what was going on in the world and were not passive recipients of a trans-imperial flow of knowledge. Rather, they selectively appropriated and commented on this knowledge, and used it to their own ends, confident of the significance of their contribution to a global struggle for liberation.
Forming a prominent movement in the early twentieth century, Japanese anarchists were important mediators of knowledge and contributed tremendously to the intellectual environment in imperial Japan. Anarchist thought was widely circulated in numerous radical newspapers and journals, such as the **Heimin Shinbun** and **Kindai ShisĆ**, but also through translations of literary and scientific works.[19] State authorities were eager not to miss any opportunity to repress the distribution of anarchist knowledge by shutting down newspapers and repeatedly harassing and arresting its editors.[20] In particular, in the wake of the Public Security Preservation Law of 1925, state repression severely weakened Japanâs anarchist movement.[21] Nevertheless, Japanese anarchists were able to maintain publication collectives, study groups, and activist associations. Between the 1900s and 1930s, various anarchist individuals and groups within the very heterogenous anarchist movement developed their own strategies of dodging, undermining, and overcoming state repression and authority. Anarchist terrorism and anarchist syndicalism were two distinctive strands of the movement that were eager to bring about instant social revolution. The Girochinsha (Guillotine Society) was probably the most prominent group promoting anarchist terror, through the bombing of symbols and killing of members of the imperial state. Its attempts at attacking the system, however, were unsuccessful, particularly in face of the sheer superior force of imperial Japanâs police and military.[22] Its members Furuta DaijirĆ and Nakahama Testu, for example, were hanged for their intention to and preparations made to assassinate then Crown Prince Hirohito in the early 1920s.[23] Syndicalism, which focused on union building and a general strike of the organized labour force in Japanâs emerging industrial sector, had appealed to workers since Japanâs early industrialization in the late nineteenth century and had become much more popular.[24] Its popularity also derived from the fact that solidarity with the growing number of industrial workers promised protection for the anarchist movement and created an awareness of collective strength. Moreover, anarchist-syndicalists believed that mobilizing the industrial masses would bring political leverage, because workersâ strikes and sabotage taking place in factories affected the industrial sector, which was âvital to the stateâs military and economic ambitionsâ.[25]
Anarchist communists, a third strand of anarchism in imperial Japan, among whom the NĆson Seinen Sha was numbered, particularly opposed anarchist syndicalism. They argued that syndicalismâas well as political-party building and parliamentarianismâwould eventually produce new hierarchies. Moreover, they also believed that syndicalism was preoccupied with the life worlds of workers in imperial Japanâs industrial and urban centres, and ignored the majority of people who were still subsisting on farms in the countryside. Anarchist communists, also referred to as âpure anarchistsâ, propagated cooperatist communalism and proposed a much more fundamental break with the remains of feudalism in the agrarian sector. This would also undermine capitalist modes of production by establishing cooperative farming within a libertarian society.[26] Based on the conviction that the countryside was the main arena of social revolution, anarchists such as Ishikawa SanshirĆ, and also the NĆson Seinen Sha, articulated very progressive notions of human existence, interaction, and organization that would evolve in anarchist farming communes.[27]
Anarchist communist theory and practice were grounded in cooperatist communalism. In the American context, Murray Bookchin has commented extensively on communalismâs aim to conceptualize a libertarian, federalist system of autonomously organized municipalities that allow people a self-determined life. Communalism, a term originating from the Paris Commune of 1871, âdoes not focus [on] the factory as its principle social arena or on the industrial proletariat as its main historical agent; and it does not reduce the free community of the future to a fanciful medieval villageâ.[28] Rather, communalism circumscribes a democratic organization, often in form of farming villages and cooperatist workshops, that is not interested in political and economic structures alone, but equally aims at cultural production and social relations âaccording to the cannons of **reason**, **reflection**, and **discourse** that uniquely belong to our speciesâ.[29] Cooperation (that is, human beings assisting each other) is a key characteristic of communalism and implies the necessity of practice and human agency.
In imperial Japan, cooperatist communalism incorporated anarchist communists and their conception of voluntary cooperative associations in communal village projects that would challenge established forms of exploitation and oppression. Anarchist communists such as the NĆson Seinen Sha referred to farming villages as **nĆson**, quite similarly to other contemporary critics of capitalism, industrialization, and urbanization from different political strands. Yet they clearly distanced themselves from conservative and fascist notions of countryside farming life as well as from anarcho-syndicalismâs focus on industrial labour, criticizing them for the exploitation of both farmers and the countryside for the benefit of the industrializing urban centres. They conceived of cooperatively owned farming villages, shared means of production, and autarky as initiating a communal life in the **museifu konmyun** (anarchist commune), which they considered the fundamental basis on which to build a communal, cooperative society (**kyĆdĆ shakai**). Mutual aid (**sĆgo fujo**), in Peter Kropotkinâs sense, Japanese anarchists argued, was the overarching force that would tie communal life together. Hence, cooperatist communalism was more than a cooperative farming association as it aimed at a holistic way of being so as to improve not only economic, but also all political, social, and cultural relations. The social organization of cooperatist communalist farming villages, anarchist communists of the NĆson Seinen Sha claimed, would envision âfor the first time the birth of the possibility of a true anarchist revolutionâ.[30]
The NĆson Seinen Sha was a group of anarchists that was particularly prominent in promoting and practising cooperatist communalist strategies in imperial Japan. The group consisted of about 23 members, with maybe several hundred supporting farmers in the countryside. Although the group appears to have been rather male-dominated, in terms of class background it was quite diverse. For instance, the groupâs two most prolific theorists Miyazaki Akira and Suzuki Yasuyuki had very different careers. Miyazaki Akira was born in 1900 in Okayama but grew up in an industrial mining area in Fukuoka prefecture in northern Kyushu. After junior high school, around the time of the Russian Revolution, he started working in the railway industry. He supposedly encountered anarchist ideas during a trip to Hokkaido and through his contacts in a Nihon University student settlement in Tokyo. He read Russian novelists, while pursuing engineering studies at a college in Shanghai. Positioned outside the privileged realms of academia and without a rich family background, working-class Miyazaki was indeed an anarchist from below. His comrade Suzuki Yasuyuki, on the contrary, grew up in typical intellectual circles, as did many contemporary revolutionary theorists and agitators. Suzuki was born in what is today Kitaibaraki, Ibaraki prefecture, in 1903, and went to school in Kamakura, where he became fascinated with Ćsugi Sakaeâs interpretations of Christian socialism. In 1925, he entered Waseda Universityâs Department of Law and very soon thereafter started publishing on anarchist thought. Hence, as these short biographical vignettes elucidate, not only did the NĆson Seinen Shaâs anarchist ideas not evolve in a singular genealogy, with a fixed set of theoretical ideas, but the groupâs members also came from varied backgrounds. Very few of them were actual academics who had the privilege of studying at a university, but all of them were intellectually engaged and participated in anarchist study groups, formed independent publishing collectives, or worked for local newspapers. Texts like Miyazakiâs 1930 âAppeal to the Farmersâ (**NĆmin ni yobu**) attracted academic members, such as Tashiro GisaburĆ (1907â1967), and convinced them to join the NĆson Seinen Shaâs cause. While most members met through anarchist group activities, some of their bonds were also tightened by the shared experience of getting arrested by the police and spending time together in prison.
Together with Yagi Akiko (1895â1983), Hoshino Junji (1906â1996), and Mochizuki JirĆ (1912â1937), Miyazaki and Suzuki founded the NĆson Seinen Sha in February 1931 and started their own communal experiment in the hinterland of Nagano prefecture. In anticipation of unrest among farmers and an uprising, the group planned to attack the military in Nagano, but this never transpired. A series of robberies in the area, which was meant to undermine the system of capitalist property and to financially support both the commune and the foreseen uprising, only resulted in the imprisonment of some of the groupâs members in 1932.[31] Due to economic hardship and harsh state repression, by September 1932 the communal project had already dissolved. Despite its short-lived and small-scale presence, the NĆson Seinen Shaâs ideas were nevertheless important as they highlight the significance of anarchist interventions and alternative visions of a better society offered by anarchism. Members of the group did not throw bombs, but they refused to pay taxes and developed a highly sophisticated critique of capitalism as well as of the contemporary socialist movement. In its one year of existence as a practising cooperatist communalist group, the NĆson Seinen Sha struggled against expanding industrialization at a time when major Japanese cities were becoming increasingly turbulent places of âimperial democracyâ, with mass protests, an emerging labour movement, union building, and widespread socialist ideas.[32] Thus, the NĆson Seinen Sha anarchists also struggled against persistent Marxist dogmatism in the socialist movement, which is particularly visible in Miyazaki Akiraâs and Suzuki Yasuyukiâs writings, and they developed ideals of cooperatist communalism in anarchist communist fashion. The group was not aiming to mobilize the masses (**taishĆ«**) as were the socialists. Rather, it had a much more grassroots, democratic, and individualistic sense of the people (**minshĆ«**) and of peoplesâ ability to organize freely in temporary, task-oriented associations of interest groups. In this regard, the group became particularly influential for theorizing and implementing self-sustained communes as well as propagating cooperative ownership, the elimination of hierarchies, and the evolvement of democratic models.[33] In doing so, the NĆson Seinen Sha was embedded within a broader agrarianist discourse in imperial Japan; yet agrarian anarchismâs cooperatist communalist theory and practice, as the following section demonstrates, departed from other agrarianist positions and criticism by fundamentally challenging imperial Japanâs feudalist system and agricultural production.
During the 1930s, agents of the Japanese imperial state aggressively campaigned against any activity that disturbed public peace (**chian**), especially accusing left-wing activists of espionage and sabotage against Japanâs nation- and empire-building. Among the stateâs prime targets were anarchist groups, some of whom tried to dodge state repression by moving to the countryside to establish cooperatist, self-sustaining communesââkeeping the state at a distanceâ, to use James Scottâs words.[34] Several waves of repressions against anarchists during the first half of the twentieth century had hit the movement severely. They peaked with the High Treason Incident in 1910/11, the hunt by the military and police for and assassination of activists and critics following the Great KantĆ Earthquake in 1923, and the rise of militarism and fascism after the Manchurian Incident in 1931. Moving to the countryside to stay out of the sight and reach of police persecution was but one strategy used by anarchists to survive individually and to maintain the continuity of the anarchist movement.[35]
Yet the anarchistsâ rural retreat involved more than just hiding in the woods from the agents of the imperial state. Anarchist theory and practice had elaborated on countryside life and agricultural production in various, highly sophisticated ways since the early twentieth century. And for good reason because, despite the increase and expansion of industrialization and urbanization in the early twentieth century, agriculture, which was based on tenant farming labour, remained a vital part of imperial Japanâs economy.[36] A domestic crisis in agriculture, as shown by the 1918 rice riots, could affect the whole empire, and vice versa. Within Japan, tenant farmers were dependent on highly influential, mostly absent, landowning elites, who often lived in Japanâs expanding cities. The imperial state tried to support tenant farmers, but programmes intended to help them to buy land failed due to shortcomings in state funding. And although state officials were eager to maintain small-scale farms because they supposedly personified traditional Japanese virtues, their lack of control on the ground opened a power vacuum that was, once again, filled by landlord elites.[37] In the 1930s, farmers also struggled with falling prices for agricultural products following inflation in the aftermath of the First World War, increasing imports from Japanâs colonies Taiwan and Korea, and global market effects in the era of the Great Depression.[38] Subsequent to the Manchurian Incident and in order to cope with the social crisis of impoverished farmers, the Japanese imperial state even initiated mass mobilization campaigns that propagated and supported resettlement of Japanese farmers in the allegedly empty Northeast Asia, which seemed to offer promising opportunities.[39] That said, anarchist communism, which conceptualized the ideal of self-sustaining, hierarchy-free communes unaffected by domestic power structures as well as global capitalism, thus seems to have directly spoken to the needs of many Japanese people still living and working in the countryside.[40]
In the early twentieth century, with the expansion of capitalism, industrialization, and urbanization, a new discourse evolved from the fantasies of modern life. In imperial Japan, as elsewhere, as Harry Harootunian has persuasively demonstrated, everyday experience became a coeval, key aspect of intellectual engagement with the global historical moment.[41] The emergence of mass culture, many contemporary critics argued, would erode community, particularly in the countrysideâand with it, cultural authenticity allegedly attached to communal village life. Some of Japanâs anarchists shared the belief in the eroding forces of capitalism on the village community. Yet, their appeal to rural communal life should not be misconstrued as nostalgia for a harmonious countryside lifestyle. In 1910, Akaba Hajime (1875â1912), who became famous for his anti-war activism, had already grasped the revolutionary dimension of cooperatist communalism in rural village life, which he outlined in a pamphlet titled âThe Farmersâ Gospelâ (**NĆmin no fukuin**), indicating his former affection for Christian socialism. Connecting older forms of Japanâs village communities with Peter Kropotkinâs idea of mutual aid, Akaba envisioned a âpure anarchist landâ that was not a simple return to an imagined, untouched past, but one that would bring âadvanced scientific knowledge and mutual aid in harmonyâ to Japanâs old village forms.[42] Anarchists like Akaba, as Sho Konishi has argued, âgave progressive meaning to the everyday cooperative practices of ordinary farmers. They identified âcooperative livingâ⊠as the means to achieve progressive, democratic and less hierarchical society on a global scale.â[43] For these anarchists, the rural village was not a mere retreat or sanctum from the forces of global capitalism, but the very locale of everyday experience and modern life.
Of course, anarchists were among a wider and heterogeneous group that fantasized about agrarian country life. Since the Meiji Restoration in 1868, an agrarianist discourse grew up in parallel with Japanâs modernization project, which peaked in the pre-war period in the 1930s.[44] Dominant agrarianism (**nĆhonshugi**), to quote Thomas Havens, âincluded a faith in agricultural economics, an affirmation of rural communalism, and a conviction that farming was indispensable to those qualities that made the nation uniqueâ.[45] Agrarianist elite conservatives criticized industrialismâbut not capitalism itselfâas an aberration that weakened agriculture, forcing farmers into the factories and creating a gap between the rich urban centres and poor rural peripheries. They imagined agriculture and rural farming communities as the nationâs backbone, feeding its population, supplying healthy citizens for its military, and guaranteeing stability and security in the overall aim of achieving wealth and national strength. Agrarianism became increasingly popular in the first half of the twentieth century and attracted folklorists like Yanagita Kunio (1875â1962) to represent the farming village as the last bastion of Japanâs timeless cultural essence, in contrast to modern life which was associated with urban centres.[46] During the agricultural crisis of the late 1920s and early 1930s, fascist agrarianists (**nĆhonshugisha**) such as Tachibana KĆzaburĆ (1893â1974) repopularized the imagined purity of communal, self-sustaining farming life. They rejected existing feudal structures and encouraged cooperative villages as the foundation of a social order that would tie farmers together materially and spiritually. Their ideas entailed a limited critique of capitalism as a destructive force that undermined a harmonious and ânaturalâ country life. Yet, like its conservative predecessor, fascist agrarianism also clung to private property and favoured patriarchal gender hierarchies in imperial Japanâs family system.[47]
Anarchistsâ promotion of cooperatist communalism was embedded within an established agrarianist discourse from a broad political spectrum in imperial Japan that articulated a critique against modernity. However, anarchist theory and practice departed from conservative, folklorist, and fascist agrarianism in crucial ways. Private property and the division of labour in capitalist modes of production, as well as patriarchy and class divisions, were forms of power that anarchists attempted to destroy and overcome. They also did not intend to invert the hierarchy between cities and villages, as some agrarianists had proposed, but to abandon any sort of hierarchy altogether.[48] Moreover, anarchists developed revolutionary notions of nature, the environment, and thus, ultimately, human existence that were much more progressive and scientifically based than conservative and fascist conceptions of nature and the countryside. Sho Konishi has demonstrated that Japanese anarchists increasingly turned to science after the Russo-Japanese War (1904/05). Their eclectic reading of Russian and French evolutionary theory, microbiology, and cosmology, all of which dealt with mutual aid among prehistoric humans and animals, symbiotic microbe organisms, and a decentred universe, were key references in their attempt to scientifically prove anarchistsâ conceptualization of cooperatist communalism without the need for hierarchy and (state) authority in social organization. Based on scientific knowledge, anarchists considered cooperation and mutual aidâas opposed to exploitation and competitionâto be the engines of a distinctive, modern temporality in historical progress and civilization.[49]
Agrarian anarchist Ishikawa SanshirĆ, for instance, embedded human existence in a constant negotiation with nature. He argued that contemporary capitalist industrial production and urban life would inevitably be intertwined with exploitation, inequality, and unhealthiness, and was therefore unnatural. Instead, his understanding of social organization as âa vast, horizontal collection of interacting parts with no centre that came together to foster (agricultural) productionâ led him to plead for a healthy life in accordance with nature.[50] This constant dynamic would prevent the establishment of hierarchies and allow individuals the freedom to express themselves. Referring to ancient Greek and Edward Carpenter, Ishikawa even redefined democracy, claiming that the original meaning of **demos** would encompass not only the common people, but also a people attached to the soil or earth (**do**). He translated âdemocracyâ into Japanese as **domin kurashi**, coining a term that sounds like democracy and simultaneously signifies âthe life of a people attached to the earthâ. This attachment, according to Ishikawa, would enable people to realize their individual nature or virtue through hard yet non-exploitive work that ultimately makes freedom possible.[51]
The anarchist communists of the NĆson Seinen Sha shared a belief in the strength of cooperative farming villages to act as a bulwark against the forces of global capitalism, and conceptualized the organization as a powerful revolutionary strategy that was more than just a naive dream of liberty. And they closed the gap between the various forms of libertarianism, agrarianism, and communalism prevalent in 1920s imperial Japan.[52] Despite a nativist, back-to-nature appealâwhich on first sight appears as a narrow-minded glorification of a premodern countryside lifestyleâthe NĆson Seinen Sha was actually a globally conscious, progressive group. Similarly to its predecessors and contemporary comrades, it participated in the exchange and appropriation of ideas and practices from various strands of radical thought from all around the world. As Sho Konishi has shown in a case study of the Arishima Farm in Hokkaido in the 1920s, anarchists in Japan considered their cooperatist communes to be part of a globally synchronic endeavour for the improvement of human life all over the world.[53] In a similar vein, the NĆson Seinen Sha conceptualized a progressive form of cooperatist being and offered an agrarianist model that was distinct from its conservative, folklorist, and fascist counterparts. It promoted cooperative work without the aim of profit and private property, and engaged in theoretical debates with the currents of anarchist theory and its Western epistemological hegemony. Its vision of an anarchist modernity, as this article will discuss in more detail in the following sections, was for a hierarchy-free social organization without state authority, on autarkic but collaborating farming communes. And they put their vision into practice by building a net of communes in Nagano prefecture in 1931.
âThe voice of the farming villagesâ poverty has indeed been around for a long time. Among all people there is no one who has not heard it.â Yet, ânobody else but the farmers themselves can rescue the farming villageâ wrote Miyazaki Akira in his introduction to âAppeal to the Farmersâ (**NĆmin ni yobu**).[54] Written in 1930 under the pen name Soeta Susumu, it was published in the first issue of the anarchist journal **Kurohata** (Black Flag). The piece was later republished as a pamphlet and became the theoretical foundation of the NĆson Seinen Sha. It offered a practical revolutionary approach and embedded cooperatist communalism within a profound critique of global capitalism and its regional forms and political systems.
In writings such as âAppeal to the Farmersâ, Miyazaki held up the farming village as the key site for social revolution. The three main tasks, he argued, were to live in an autarky, to possess only shared property, and to establish communal welfare based on mutual aid. As the title indicates, the pamphlet was meant to appeal especially to farmers: âthe liberation of the farming village must come at the hands of the farmersâ, who, Miyazaki claimed, would know their own needs best (**jibun jishin**). Thus, farmers should not believe in the lie of peasantsâ lawful liberation from above after the supposed end of the feudal system. Moreover, they should never accept help from the bourgeoisie. The cooperative production and consumption of food and other necessities by farmers would undermine the hegemony of the ruling class (**shihai gaikyĆ«**); the creation of self-sustaining communes was therefore fundamental for liberation. Anarchist communism was thus no longer a future goal, as Miyazaki considered that farmers organizing anarchist communes and putting cooperatist communalist visions into practice would cause an instant social revolution.
The first step towards accomplishing cooperatist communalism, according to the NĆson Seinen Sha, was to understand that the communal life in farming villages was the only possible way of life. Famersâ products, Miyazaki believed, were supposed to meet the producersâ own needs only. This would be a universal law, as entering the capitalist market by exchanging agricultural goods for money would inevitably ruin village life (**seikatsu no reiraku**). Thus, Miyazaki asked, âHow can village life stand on its own feet without selling rice, vegetables and subsidiary products, and without any money?â His logical conclusion was that for a village to achieve absolute independence, free of money and market forces, it needed to become self-sufficient (**jikyĆ« jisoku**): âIs facilitating the autarky of the farming village producing food from the soil not the most important issue?â[55] This rhetoric was obviously embedded in inter-war Japanâs agrarian discourse. Miyazakiâs strong emphasis on rice as the pivotal agricultural product perpetuated a culturalist sentiment for Japanese nationalist exceptionalism, and its metaphorical use seems to be similar to imperial Japanâs nationalist agrarianism.[56] Yet, it is remarkable how Miyazaki departed from nationalist and spiritualist readings of the countryside and agricultural production in his emphasis on the universal materiality of the human body at the heart of agricultural labour. Of course, there is an amount of vague spirituality in Miyazakiâs assertion that eating something different from what you produce by yourself makes life incomplete (**fukanzen**), leaving the exact meaning of incompleteness up to the readerâs imagination. Unlike other agrarianists, however, Miyazaki was not arguing for a spiritual basis to products such as rice to connect humans, soil, and their ancestors. The production of foodârice in this caseâinstead signifies an existential human need that must be satisfied. The soil or earth nevertheless played a pivotal role in this task, which becomes particularly visible in the trope of the âfarming village producing food from the earthâ (**tabemono wo do kara tsukuri nĆson**). According to Miyazaki, the connection between earth and humans was purely materialistic, and its harmony manifested in the reciprocity of human labour cultivating the earth, which in turn provides crops and harvest for human existence. This universal materialistic law of a reciprocal, harmonious relationship between nature and humans, maintained through earthâs matter and energy as well as human agency, would be the foundation for social mechanisms. In line with the argument formulated by the English anarchist George Barrett, the production of and access to foodââthe individual struggle to live, in its most simple and elementary formââresults in society and lies at the heart of social organization.[57] Self-sufficient manual farming labour, Miyazaki was convinced, would take control of fundamental social mechanisms. It would overcome capitalist modes of production, ownership, and authority, which ultimately would allow free individuals to associate and was thus the most promising strategy to achieving liberation.[58]
Organizing villages along self-sufficient lines of production indeed had revolutionary potential. The emphasis on self-sufficiency through mutual aid was supposed to undermine state authority, the capitalist division of labour, and the exploitation of people and nature. Similarly to Akaba Hajime, Miyazaki also imagined that imperial Japanâs cooperatist communities would be built on land âthat farmers are supposed to use freelyâ, and that mutual aid would be combined with advanced technologies to achieve self-sufficiency as opposed to profit.[59] A key concern was money, which enabled exploitation through profit and division of labour, and was therefore considered a force that eroded solidarity. Miyazaki wrote, âWith the birth of money in society happiness vanishesâ, arguing that money divides people, humans and their products, farmers and workers, cities and countryside. Self-sufficient farming within the village community and shared property would curb the threat of money and prevent the establishment of hierarchies.[60]
When it comes to the issue of tax payments (**nĆzei**), in particular, anarchistsâ vision of self-sufficient villages and rejection of money directly attacked the stateâs authority. As Miyazaki explained, modern state institutionsâ demand for tax payments from farmers was only possible through the production of revenue gained by selling agricultural products to the market in exchange for money. Tax revenues, in turn, are crucial to the survival of state authorities, as they pay for the stateâs administration, police, and military. Therefore, Miyazaki polemicized, the paying of tax âcovers the pension of the governmentâs bureaucrats, soldiers and police officers who have looked down on the people with arroganceâ. Moreover, tax payments would only help capitalists to make profit. As they support state institutions and authority, and sustain capitalist modes of production, they therefore entail exploitation. Instead, the people could provide all the alleged benefits of tax payments themselves. Following on from his initial remarks, Miyazaki argued that all matters of village life, such as âputting up bridges, building roads, setting up irrigation for uncultivated land, building storehouses and communal manufactoriesâ, could be solved by village people themselves: âWhen everything is done by the village cooperation, there is no basis for governmentâs theft of tax money.â[61] Whereas other agrarianists had argued for self-sufficiency and a reduction in taxes so as not to support a corrupt government and what they called a âdiseasedâ, âunnaturalâ, and allegedly âun-Japaneseâ urban industry with its ruling elites, the cooperatist communalist anarchists of the NĆson Seinen Sha developed a much stronger anti-state and anti-nationalist strategy. Refusing to pay tax was a radical rejection of the imperial state and its projects, and a clear statement against the landowning and capitalist elites.
Money and tax payments were also directly linked to issues of security and war. Japanâs elites, according to Miyazaki, wanted people to believe that all citizensâ support for the state, economy, and military in a collaborating society (**kyĆdĆ shakai**) generated national unity and strength, to everyoneâs benefit. On the contrary, Miyazaki argued, the governmentâs call for unity and security, a call amplified by the demands of âbureaucrats, police officers and bourgeois educatorsâ to honour the nation, would only be a distraction. The nation, national unity, strength, and security in a collaborating society of and for all people were mere constructions of the ruling class. The imperial state, its agents, and the bourgeoisie would be the only ones profiting from the peopleâs labour and tax payments. Moreover, Miyazaki considered money, taxes, and capitalism to be the foundation for war preparation as modern industrial production was indispensable for modern war and, arguably, vice versa. And the defence of the collaborating society (**kyĆdĆ shakai no bĆkyo**) that the aura of war, as well as warfare itself, was necessary to secure the nationâs wealth and strength against foreign threats for the benefit for all citizens would, in fact, only serve the ruling class.[62]
Miyazakiâs line of argument was obviously a direct critique of imperial Japanâs nationalism, industrial expansion, and rising militarism in the inter-war period. The anarchistsâ intervention was indeed much more radical than other groupsâ agrarianist promotion of self-sufficient countryside life organized in farming villages. Self-organizing farmers without internal or external authority who rejected paying taxes clearly undermined capitalist modes of production and imperial Japanâs modernization project which was heavily focused on industrialization and urbanization. Yet the NĆson Seinen Sha envisioned that farmers could, and should, liberate themselves. Ironically, however, the voices of the farmers themselves can hardly be heard in Miyazakiâs writings. The essayâs titleââAppeal to Farmersââalready indicates that Miyazaki ultimately spoke **to** the farmers and in favour of them, and not **with** themâand definitely never let the farmers speak for themselves. Indeed, his appeal might have attracted other anarchist intellectuals rather than the subaltern tenant farmers in the countryside. Gayatri Spivak, among others, has called attention to the inherent epistemic violence in the desire of intellectuals to represent subaltern people of colour.[63] Miyazaki, too, repeated the mechanism of epistemic violence to a certain extent: he fell into the trap of sympathizing with the oppressedâthe speaking **for** the farmers and their interestsâthereby reproducing a hierarchy between the theorizing and agitating intellectual and the farmer as supposed revolutionary subject. Nonetheless, Miyazakiâs rhetoric strategy was not to position himself as the spokesperson **for** the farmers but to argue that only farmers themselves, through farm life itself, could achieve full liberation. Indeed, it underscores an insistence on agency and self-sustaining practiceâthe organization of cooperatist communalist farming villagesâas opposed to theorizing revolutionary action. The NĆson Seinen Shaâs revolutionary conception of cooperatist communalism thus corresponds directly to what Murray Bookchin argued several decades later: â[O]ur decision to create a better society, and our choice of the way to do it, must come **from within ourselves**, without the aid of a deity, still less a mystical âforce of natureâ or a charismatic leader.â[64]
The notion of leaderless and allegedly untainted or pure anarchism in farming village communes continued to characterize the NĆson Seinen Shaâs theory and practice. In a less dramatic manner, one might comprehend the anarchistsâ understanding of purity as a matter of consequence. Their idea of organized farming villages as the basis for social revolution aimed at avoiding the creation of any avenues for the (re-)emergence of hierarchies after liberation has been achieved. In a pamphlet titled âThe Organisation of the Recent Movement and a Proposal on the Form it should Takeâ, published collectively in 1931 under the pseudonym âAssociation for Bread and Libertyâ (**Pan to JiyĆ«sha**), the NĆson Seinen Sha emphasized this point. The group promoted a clear break with syndicalism and promised to continue to sharply criticize any other âimpuritiesâ (**fujunbutsu**) in the anarchist and socialist movement. In order to convince readers that they were âon the straight way to anarchist revolutionâ, the NĆson Seinen Sha argued that it would be imperative to clarify the form and organization the anarchist movement should take.[65]
Unsurprisingly, the NĆson Seinen Sha envisioned a movement free of any form of centralized organization and emphasized autonomous action and decentralization as the only meaningful tactics. According to its critique, it had been an error of the previous mass-oriented anarchist and labour movement to establish permanent groups for education, labour, propaganda, and so on. Their criticism targeted, in particular, nationwide anarchist organizations such as the Kokushoku Seinen Reimen (shortened to Kokuren), which had emerged from December 1925 out of various militant groups and identified itself as an avant-garde minority struggling for class liberation.[66] Taking the example of the propaganda leaflets of anarchist groups that operated nationwide, the NĆson Seinen Sha complained about the almost endless meetings and arduous decision-making processes that were necessary to determine who would eventually write, proofread, print, and distribute a statement or leaflet. Such long processes were ineffective and, moreover, made the movement vulnerable, because reliance on an unchanging organizational structure made it easier for the authorities to persecute and eventually paralyse the movement.[67]
In contrast, the NĆson Seinen Sha envisioned only occasional, task-oriented groups. One of its catchphrases was âgather when necessary, dissolve when finishedâ. This became a motto to articulate the temporary nature of the grouping together of individuals who shared interests to achieve a particular goal. In vainglorious terms, the NĆson Seinen Sha even claimed that, âThis is where for the first time the possibility of a true anarchist revolution is born.â[68] The strategy of organizing the masses to rise up to achieve an anarchist revolution, either through intensive propaganda or planned and/or spontaneous uprisings, would have been unsuccessful under the prevailing circumstances. Such actions would even cause harm to the movement, because it would have made it easy for state authorities to intervene, win the struggle due to the imperial stateâs superior force, and reaffirm its authority. Even more importantly, the development of individual freedom was at stake. Instead of a centralized mass organization, the meeting up of individuals would allow them to articulate their personal needs and desires independently. Ultimately, the NĆson Seinen Sha argued, such individual-based contact and association around a single issue and repeatedly confronting the individual with a ânew worldviewâ (**atarashii sekaikan**) would create a dynamic from which a ânew humanâ (**shinjin**) âan anarchistâwould emerge who bore the potential for full liberation. Its call to immediate action was: âRefuse bottom-up as well as from periphery to the centre! From formation to decentralisation! Autonomous, decentralised action rather than centralisation!â[69]
The NĆson Seinen Shaâs strong rhetoric criticizing the contemporary anarchist movement and theorizing the necessary steps for a successful anarchist revolution was not free of contradictions. As John Crump has stressed, contemporary anarchists, including Hatta ShuzĆ (1886â1934), pointed out that regarding organization there would be some inconsistencies between the groupâs theory and practice. Despite the call for equality between anarchists and common farmers, those NĆson Seinen Sha members still living in urban centres believed in the groupâs avant-garde, revolutionary force. Hatta heavily criticized the NĆson Seinen Sha for pretending to claim to have no leadership while simultaneously setting themselves up as providing guidance to the masses.[70] Despite the validity of such criticism, the NĆson Seinen Shaâs anarchist theory of action was nevertheless remarkable. It might appear as just a simple, nativist, retrogressive dream of retreating from industrial urbanization to a seemingly untainted natural environment. Yet the groupâs degree of awareness of the forces of capitalism and its strategies to undermine them are distinctive and highly progressive. In particular, the emphasis on a self-sufficient farming life in which free individuals were connected by mutual aid and were organized temporarily in task-oriented associations becomes even more effective by connecting such a life with a refusal to pay taxes in order to shatter the existential basis of the imperial state. Moreover, NĆson Seinen Shaâs anarchism was embedded into a perspicacious framework promoting a ânew worldviewâ, indicating the groupâs globally conscious vision for liberation. Such global appeal becomes particularly apparent through its emphasis on creating the ânew humanâ, which discursively connected Japanese anarchists to the endeavour of social movements worldwide. Similar poetics of the ânew humanâ synchronously emerged in movements and places as different as Weimar Republican **Lebensreform**, Soviet physical culture, and Mohandas Gandhiâs bodily exercises.[71] Hence, as the following section will demonstrate, Japanese anarchists from the NĆson Seinen Sha were exceedingly modern in and through their globally conscious trans-imperial anarchism.
Trans-imperial connectionsâphysical manoeuvring and intellectual journeying within and beyond imperial boundariesâwere characteristic of Japanese anarchists. The contact, collision, and conjunction of revolutionary theory and practice worldwide was pivotal for developing its ideas and sharpening its arguments. In particular, appreciation ofâand equally importantâdemarcation from socialist thought and revolutionary experience the world over was crucial to the NĆson Seinen Shaâs identity politics in terms of establishing its distinct yet universalist cooperatist communalism. There is not one singular source or movement that can be determined as the origin of its anarchism. Rather, a multiplicity of influences shaped the groupâs anarchist theory and practice.
The Russian Revolution and subsequent Bolshevik rule became a major point of reference for revolutionary thought worldwideâit allowed âutopian daydreamingâ, to quote Neil McInnesâs disparaging remark, and had a decisive but also divisive impact on socialist/communist movements.[72] Japanese anarchists were well aware of Bolshevismâs revolutionary force in transforming society and acknowledged its vision of necessary fundamental social change. They even agreed with the idea of âcreative violenceâ (**sĆzĆteki bĆryoku**) as a destructive force that would shatter the existing social, economic, political, and cultural order and would be imperative to achieving full liberation in a newly built social organization. Yet members of the NĆson Seinen Sha, like many other leftist revolutionary theorists and activists in Japan and elsewhere,[73] had reservations about Bolshevismâs methods and heavily objected to it for various reasons. The group criticized centralized party building as well as the submission of the individual to the will of the party, labelling it as an avant-garde revolutionary force and constraint collectivization. In bold language, Miyazaki called attention to the Bolsheviksâ foreseeable oppression: âTo achieve their high ambitions they will exploit the people.â In order to illustrate Bolsheviksâ true and bad intentions, Miyazaki compared its intervention with sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Japanese feudalist regimes under Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa rule. Feudal lords would also have claimed to aim for the âtransformation of societyâ (**shakai no henkaku**); however, âfrom the position of the people [**minshĆ«**], common peopleâs life was still not liberatedâ. Miyazaki agreed with the Bolsheviks that with âtodayâs landowning capitalistsâ government ⊠there is [a] need to take the political power of the established ruling class in the peopleâs own hands by forceâ. Yet, he asserted that âthe people betrayed by the government ⊠are certainly as easily betrayed by the Bolsheviksâ. Miyazaki was convinced that the Bolsheviks misunderstood the fundamental principles of successful revolutionary transformation and that this was thus a sign of Bolshevismâs anti-revolutionary, backward, even reactionary methods. This would be particularly visible from the perspective of the farming village. âBy the time when the Bolsheviks have seized power in a red government (**sekishoku seifu**) based in the city, the Bolshevik functionary comes to the village with commands for the peasants, the first one being ârequisition of harvestâ. Without any reason they go and rob the peasantsâ products.â[74] Any resistance to such orders would be severely punished, and Miyazaki underscored this by reminding his readers of the Great KantĆ Earthquake in 1923 as well as the March 15 Incident from 1928, and how dissidents were persecuted, arrested, and assassinated by government officials in the wake of these events. Thus, Miyazaki urged âthe dear farmersâ to understand that socialist transformation and five-years plans were no less than âdirty deceptionâ (**fuketsuna giman**) that would not lead to their liberation.[75]
NĆson Seinen Shaâs radical critique not only targeted Bolshevism, it also attacked anarchist and socialist movements and their advocates worldwide. In his **History of the Japanese Anarchist Movement** from 1932, Suzuki Yasuyuki discussed at length the weaknesses and pitfalls of previous socialist theory and practice, including the European tradition of anarchism. In particular, he heavily criticized Mikhail Bakunin and his plea for a âbottom-upâ (**shita kara ue e**) approach as âdestructive destructionâ (**hakai tekina hakai**). On the contrary, Suzuki put the case for the NĆson Seinen Shaâs âpractical anarchismâ (**jissen tekina museifushugi**) and its âconstructive destructionâ (**kensetsu tekina hakai**). He also emphasized that the groupâs most important shift in terms of anarchist theory and practice would not offer liberation **to** the farmers (**nĆson no naka e**), but instead a non-hierarchical, decentralized, temporal, and task-oriented organization **from** within their midst (**nĆson no naka kara**). This could be accomplished through the immediate implementation of an egalitarian system of production and consumption organized in cooperative farming villages.[76]
By discussing and criticizing the goals and failures of socialist and anarchist movements in Russia, France, Germany, and Spain, Suzuki integrated Japanese anarchism into a worldwide struggle for liberation. He could not base his arguments on NĆson Seinen Shaâs achievements or popularity among the masses. Rather, in contrast to what he called the âemotionalâ, and therefore foredoomed, efforts in the West, Suzuki underscored the groupâs rationality. He insisted that it would be an enlightened (**keimĆ tekina**), science-based movement, and that its theory and practice would ultimately lead to revolution.[77] Suzukiâs reasoning was grounded in a fundamental understanding of social organization as social organism. This global idea was widespread and appeared alongside competing and conflicting political positions and scientific approaches. Anarchists like George Barrett, whose **Anarchist Revolution** Suzuki had translated in 1930, as well as, among many others, socialist and social hygienist Auguste Forel in Switzerland, sociologist Ămile Durkheim in France, evolutionist Herbert Spencer in England, and the Nazi vision of the **Volkskörper** fostered an understanding of society as a complex social organism that forms a whole through the functionality of all its social parts and being.[78] Such a shared understanding underscores the NĆson Seinen Shaâs progressive position globally. Yet Suzuki and Miyazaki did not dwell only on the groupâs rationality and modernity woven into its narrative of anarchist theory and practice, they departed from other notions of social organism in crucial ways. They emphasized that human agency was not limited to its functionality for the whole social body, but was an individual freedom to choose and experience labour and association in a liberated society, based on the idea of mutual aid.
Suzuki did not dismiss all Western science. On the contrary, he provided an anarchist reading of history, anthropology, and evolutionary theory with reference to Peter Kropotkin as well as ĂlisĂ©e Reclus, an anarchist geographer whose thought had a strong impact on the development of eco-anarchism. He demonstrated the pivotal and universal significance of mutuality for social organization and human existence. Suzuki thought of contemporary capitalist society as being âin the middle of serious unrestâ and claimed that people blinded by Darwinist evolutionary theory, and who embraced life as a form of competition, would intensify the worldâs crisis. He rejected Marxism, because it would not offer any solution due to its narrow focus on the connections between human beings determined by capitalism and the struggle for the means of production. More important, according to Suzuki, was the emphasis on mutuality or mutual aidânot competition or struggleâas a historical force for liberation. Studies on the life of monkeys and prehistoric human activity had proven, he argued, that conflict and struggle in society had emerged alongside the development of inequality and hierarchy caused by the organization of clans and classes. Following ĂlisĂ©e Reclus, Suzuki thus promoted another take on world history in terms of universal harmony and social equality:
It is deeply moving to carefully observe the entire landscape of the earth, its nature of infinite variety and the effect of human activitiesâ eternal force causing its harmony [âŠ]. Yet, the very same earthâsustaining and furthermore providing for humankindâand heavenâilluminating the world and supplying the universeâs energyâtogether with a matrix of human beings in harmoniously vibrating conditions can be seen and sensed.[79]
Dismissing Suzukiâs claims as mere naive, idealist belief in a better world that had supposedly existed in ancient times and which might be envisioned in the far future does not do justice to his grounding in scientific reasoning. Suzukiâs line of argument was very close to the observations that Japanese anarchists had articulated a decade before. For instance, in the 1920s Ishikawa SanshirĆ had called for a similar cosmological approach, labelled âunity in multiplicityâ, arguing, in Sho Konishiâs words, for âthe infinity that characterised the centreless universeâ, which dictates âthe absence of an absolute subject of power and the limitlessness of possibilities for human interaction and cultural inventionâ.[80] Humankind would need to overcome hierarchy and competition, Suzuki insisted, so as to progress towards harmonious and free social organization. Suzuki and the NĆson Seinen Sha were convinced that cooperatist communalism, existing in anarchist communes that facilitated mutual aid, would be a necessary first step towards achieving a constant cosmological dynamic that would prevent the establishment of hierarchies and competition.
Despite Suzuki Yasuyukiâs critique of Western socialist and anarchist theory and practice, his narrative strategy of citing Western references appeared to him to be the only way to gain legitimacy. Despite his strong efforts to distance himself, his writings reveal an underlying continuity with a Western epistemological matrix, in which European thought appears as the only point of reference to give authority to any kind of progressive, rational thinking. Suzukiâs critique thus seems to have been trapped in the dilemma articulated by Dipesh Chakrabarty, who has argued that while the terms and concepts from the European tradition are inadequate, they are nevertheless indispensable for evaluating non-Western phenomena in order to them to be recognized.[81] It is remarkable that Suzuki pointed out basic misunderstandings of social mechanisms and revolutionary practice inherent in movements such as Bolshevism. In doing so, he underscored the emotional character of Western socialist and anarchist movements, and disparaged its revolutionary romanticisms as the main reason for the failure of social revolutions. In contrast, Suzuki emphasized the NĆson Seinen Shaâs rationality and progressiveness. It is his insistence on universality and scientifically certified forces of human existence, agency, and creativityâsuch as mutual aid in evolutionary theoryâthat undermined the Westâs claim for rationality. Yet his reproduction of Western epistemic hegemony gave authority to Suzukiâs logic, rendering cooperatist communalism as a globally conscious and modern approach to social innovation and, ultimately, liberation.
An attempt to decentre social revolution from following a Eurocentric script is also apparent in the NĆson Seinen Shaâs engagement with non-Western revolutionary theory and practice. Contemporary Asian movements sparked interest for obvious reasons, one being their spatial proximity to the orbit of the Japanese empire. Nevertheless, Japanese anarchists could have just ignored other Asian movements and only looked at the struggles of European, American, and Russian comrades. Miyazaki, on the contrary, compared the NĆson Seinen Shaâs concepts with, for example, those of the anti-colonial struggle in India. In particular, Gandhiâs campaign of non-cooperation, translated by Miyazaki as **muteikĆ shugi** and which he even referred to as âGandhismâ (**ganjÄ«zumu**), was of interest to Japanese anarchists. The non-cooperation campaign was part of Gandhiâs larger concept of non-violent resistance (**satyagraha**) in the Indian independence movement. Miyazaki argued that non-cooperation as conceptualized by Gandhi would have both an economic and a political dimension. The boycott of British goods and the sole consumption of Indian products instead would indeed undermine the colonial administration and help stop the generation of revenue for the British government. He particularly praised Gandhiâs understanding of autarky to gain independence. Yet, Miyazaki believed that âGandhism is incompleteâ because its focus on changing the economy and the political system would not change the social organization in which they were rooted. Indiaâs independence from British colonial rule might result in a new economy and reformed political system, but without radical change, Miyazaki argued, the bourgeoisie would continue to dominate a hierarchical society that would not liberate the people.[82]
The NĆson Seinen Sha also discussed other revolutionary peasant uprisings in Asia. It addressed incidents and movements in Northeast Asia and British Burma, and evaluated their sustainability and radicalism. However, it did not judge radicalism by the degree of violence in the uprisings, which the NĆson Seinen Sha did not reject per se. For example, it did not condemn the Wanpaoshan Incident of 1 July 1931 (which involved a clash between Korean and Chinese farmers and resulted in outbursts of anti-Chinese violence all over colonial Korea) for its obvious racism and unnecessary ruthlessness. Rather, it argued that the uprising failed because it could not be turned into a ârevolutionary rebellionâ (**kakumeitekina bĆdĆ**). By contrast, the group praised a series of peasant uprisings in British Burma that later became known as the Saya San Rebellion (1930â1932). Most historiography has highlighted the Burmese peasantsâ backwardness, prematurity, and lack of organization in similar insurrections, reflecting Marxâs distrust of the peasantry, who were regarded as reactionary, showing no solidarity with workers, and having no class consciousness. Many local contemporary socialists and communists in East and Southeast Asia also expressed anti-peasantry feeling, stereotyping farmers as superstitious, too respectful of hierarchy, tradition-bound and therefore fearful of (revolutionary) change.[83] The NĆson Seinen Sha, however, celebrated Burmese peasantsâ traits and characteristics:
The recent peasant rebellion spreading in British Burma possesses no centred organisational body [**chĆ«shin tekina soshikitai**] of any kind. This is peasantsâ fashion whose autonomous action has no concentrated structure. [âŠ] If the Burma peasants had clung to centralised organisation [**shĆ«chĆ« soshiki**] and if there had been no autonomy pervaded spirit, the peasants would have instantly been repressed.[84]
In contrast to Marxist doctrine, that of the NĆson Seinen Sha defended the peasantry for their revolutionary practice and, moreover, even underscored their radicalism as revolutionary subjects. Peasant rebellions, it argued, are autonomous, and farmersâ self-organization and self-sufficiency made them independent from established imperial bourgeois society and economy. These circumstances would foster the potential to change the system at its roots.
At first glance, it is striking that all of the NĆson Seinen Shaâs commentaries never raised the issue of race. The absence of any mention of race and racism in its analysis of events in colonial constellations such as the Gandhi-lead independence movement in colonial India and the peasant rebellion in British Burma is particularly conspicuous. It is especially noteworthy because the British empireâs colonial administrations are especially known for their race-conscious ârule of colonial differenceâ.[85] Racial taxonomies, hierarchies, and tensions were also significant in Japanâs empire-building, as the Wanpaoshan Incident and its aftermath demonstrate.[86] Being positioned outside the racial and epistemological privileged West, Japanese anarchists could have supported their aim for liberation with anti-racist arguments. Of course, members of the NĆson Seinen Sha might just have been too ignorant or preoccupied to acknowledge racialized hierarchy and power. Its idea of liberation seems to have been too practical, yet also too universalist and abstract, so that perhaps it just could not see any need to recognize the issue. In particular, its idea of the ânew humanâ was a distraction from the fact that skin colour as a signifier of power matters. As the NĆson Seinen Sha unambiguously argued: âOur understanding is to breathe a new **Weltanschauung** [**sekaikan**] into the new human as quickly as possible. The new human as anarchist will initiate independent autonomous action by determining his own needs and demands (**yĆ«kyĆ«**).â[87] Following the logic of Japanese anarchists, its ultimate goal of liberation and equality appears to have allowed no petty differentiation; hierarchies of race, it apparently believed, would dissolve after the new human understood and brought about humanityâs true and pure nature of autonomy and liberty.
Newspapers and the police alike imagined the NĆson Seinen Sha to be a force that undermined the empire and state authority. The mass media, however, mainly paid attention to the group in 1937, after the police had arrested some of its members between 1934 and 1936, long after its commune project had ended. Some of the arrests occurred in the wake of preparations for a military manoeuvre in Naganoâs neighbouring prefecture of Gunma, which emperor Hirohito was meant to attend, and were therefore part of clearing the area of potential threats by the police.[88] Even in retrospect, they presented the groupâs network as a kraken whose tentacles had apparently reached into every part of the Japanese empire, from Karafuto to Korea, Taiwan and Shanghai, and of course inside mainland Japan.[89] Just one day later, Korean newspapers also reported the arrest of members of the group, showing that the news had spread throughout the Japanese empire.[90] In their reports the police classified the NĆson Seinen Sha as a secret society (**himitsu kessha**) and stressed that its alleged hidden activities were undermining the imperial state. They even called attention to what they called â**NĆson Seinen Sha**-**izumu**â, a phrase in which -**izumu** (-ism) completely overrated the groupâs potential threat. The policeâs labelling gave the group a sneaky, dangerous, and foreign appeal, compounded by borrowing an ending from a foreign language instead of the Japanese character compound **shugi**. Moreover, the police emphasized the NĆson Seinen Shaâs adaption of foreign anarchist thought, mainly from Russian thinkers.[91] As Umemori Naoyuki has stressed in the context of the persecution of anarchists in the High Treason Incident in 1910, such a discursive construction of a supposed anarchist threat as coming from outside the Japanese community echoed the imperial stateâs symbolic crackdown of its internal enemies. The stateâs intervention in highlighting anarchistsâ supposed foreignness distinguished between included and excluded imperial subjects, and was subsequently aimed at fostering imperial Japanâs community.[92]
The emphasis on foreignness in the media and the authoritiesâ representation of the NĆson Seinen Sha, however, also demonstrates the connectedness of its anarchist theory and practice beyond imperial Japan and accentuates its trans-imperial anarchism. Indeed, the NĆson Seinen Sha and other movementsâ propagation and building of radical utopian communities should be understood as part of a global, synchronic phenomenon. As has been demonstrated, Suzukiâs reference to Western anarchist thought and practice is proof of a trans-imperial flow of knowledge, and his globally conscious critique at least indicates that non-Western anarchists were not passive recipients of such knowledge, but actively contributed to its appropriation. As Alf LĂŒdtke has argued, appropriationâin accordance with the German term **Aneignung**âalways entails rupture, change, and challenge, and therefore does not mean unilateral dissemination.[93] Moreover, a decentralized, and especially a non-Eurocentric, acknowledgement of non-Western revolutionary theory and practice allows the recognition of historical variety beyond Western master narratives of political struggle. For instance, Japan itself is still not known for a history of dissent, despite the existence of many radical activists and groups. Looking at the NĆson Seinen Shaâs writings which address liberation struggles in various places and which are usually ignored in contemporary European thought and activism, opens further perspectives on anarchism and other forms of radicalism in numerous parts in the world. Of course, Russia is most important, given the high impact of Russian anarchist thought on Japanese intellectuals in the first half of the twentieth century. But NĆson Seinen Shaâs analysis of Gandhism in India and revolutionary peasant movements in colonial Burma also underscores global entanglements, at least in the awareness of anarchist activists.
A close reading of imperial Japanâs anarchistsâ text and paying attention to their cooperatist communalism offer insights that allow scholarly and political intervention, as does highlighting such silenced histories, with the aim of integrating them into broader conversationâhopefully on historical actorsâ own terms. The key characteristics of imperial Japanâs anarchism, it appears, were its pragmatism, practicality, and universalityâbuilding anarchist self-sufficient farming communes that would simultaneously undermine state authority and ensure the survival of the movementsâ practitioners. For the NĆson Seinen Sha, cooperatist communalism was therefore a practical solution for revolutionary practice, which, for some members of the anarchist movement, might appear as much less heroic and idealistic than bombing the infrastructure or organizing the general strike to initiate revolution. Self-sufficient life and farming villages guided by mutual aid obviously does not overthrow the system overnight. It nevertheless undermines it radically by refusing the payment of taxes, dodging state repression, and living according to oneâs own needs. Anarchistsâ cooperatist communalism thus should not be dismissed as a mere naive, idealistic dream, but rather acknowledged as a very likely and thus practical solution in everyday life. Ultimately, despite its local and pragmatic focus, the NĆson Seinen Sha actually articulated universalist claims of liberation. Such universal practicality helped Japanese anarchists to position themselves against Japanâs imperial state power as much as against Eurocentric hegemony, and their trans-imperial anarchism demonstrates anarchistsâ global vision in guiding revolutionary theory and practice.
I am grateful to Cyrian Pitteloud, Pascale Siegrist, Narita Keisuke, Sho Konishi, Shakhar Rahav, Umemori Naoyuki, Carl Levy, Harriet Hulme, and the anonymous reviewers of Modern Asian Studies for their insightful comments which helped tremendously to improve this article.
[1] Anderson, Benedict, Under Three Flags: Anarchism and the Anti-Colonial Imagination (New York: Verso, 2007), p. 2.
[2] A prominent case study for Southeast Asia and beyond is Scott, James C., The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009).
[3] Ramnath, Maia, Haj to Utopia: How the Ghadar Movement Charted Global Radicalism and Attempted to Overthrow the British Empire (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011); and Khuri-Makdisi, Ilham, The Eastern Mediterranean and the Making of Global Radicalism, 1860â1914 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010).
[4] van der Walt, Lucien and Hirsch, Steven J., âRethinking Anarchism and Syndicalism: The Colonial and Post-colonial Experience, 1870â1940â, in Anarchism and Syndicalism in the Colonial and Postcolonial World, 1870â1940: The Praxis of National Liberation, Internationalism, and Social Revolution, (eds) Hirsch, Steven J. and Walt, Lucien van der (Leiden: Brill, 2010), p. li.
[5] The historical and thematic variety of anarchism in theory and practice globally is also vividly illustrated in: Levy, Carl and Adams, Matthew S. (eds), The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019).
[6] On KĆtoku and Ćsugi, respectively, see: Tierney, Robert Thomas, Monster of the Twentieth Century: KĆtoku ShĆ«sui and Japanâs First Anti-Imperialist Movement (Oakland: University of California Press, 2015); and Umemori, Naoyuki, Shoki shakai shugi no chikeigaku: Ćsugi Sakae to sono jidai (Tokyo: YĆ«shisha, 2016).
[7] See, among others, Large, Stephen S., âThe Romance of Revolution in Japanese Anarchism and Communism during the TaishĆ Periodâ, Modern Asian Studies, vol. 11, no. 3, 1977, pp. 441â467; Notehelfer, Fred G., KĆtoku ShĆ«sui: Portrait of a Japanese Radical (London and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1971); Matsuda, Michio, Anakizumu: HenshĆ«, kaisetsu, Gendai nihon shisĆ taike 16 (Tokyo: Chikuma shobĆ, 1963), pp. 36â42; Stanley, Thomas A., Ćsugi Sakae: Anarchist in TaishĆ Japan. The Creativity of the Ego (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1982), pp. 59â63; Hoston, Germaine A., The State, Identity, and the National Question in China and Japan (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994), p. 127.
[8] Willems, Nadine, âTransnational Anarchism, Japanese Revolutionary Connections, and the Personal Politics of Exileâ, The Historical Journal, vol. 61, no. 3, 2018, pp. 719â741, p. 721]
[9] Hwang, Dongyoun, Anarchism in Korea: Independence, Transnationalism, and the Question of National Development 1919â1984 (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2016); Karl, Rebecca, Staging the World: Chinese Nationalism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century (Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2002); Dirlik, Arif, Anarchism in the Chinese Revolution (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991); and Zarrow, Peter, Anarchism and Chinese Political Culture (New York: Columbia University Press, 1990).
[10] Turcato, Davide, âItalian Anarchism as a Transnational Movement, 1885â1915â, International Review of Social History, vol. 52, no. 3, 2007, pp. 404â444, pp. 412 and 415; Kawashima, Ken C., The Proletarian Gamble: Korean Workers in Interwar Japan (Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2009).
[11] Hedinger, Daniel and HeĂ©, Nadin, âTrans-Imperial HistoryâConnectivity, Cooperation and Competitionâ, Journal of Modern European History, vol. 16, no. 4, 2018, pp. 429â452.
[12] Hofmann, Reto, âThe Fascist New-Old Orderâ, Journal of Global History, vol. 12, no. 2, 2017, pp. 166â183, pp. 172â173; see also the special issueâs editorial: Hedinger, Daniel and Hofmann, Reto, âAxis Empires: Towards a Global History of Fascist Imperialismâ, Journal of Global History, vol. 12, no. 2, 2017, pp. 161â165; and Harootunian, Harry D., Marx after Marx: History and Time in the Expansion of Capitalism (New York: Columbia University Press, 2015).
[13] Burbank, Jane and Cooper, Frederick, Empires in World History: Power and the Politics of Difference (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010), pp. 3â4.
[14] HeĂ©, Nadin, Imperiales Wissen und koloniale Gewalt: Japans Herrschaft in Taiwan 1895â1945 (Frankfurt/M.: Campus, 2012), p. 30; Saaler, Sven, âPan-Asianism in Modern Japanese History: Overcoming the Nation, Creating a Region, Forging an Empireâ, in Pan-Asianism in Modern Japanese History: Colonialism, Regionalism and Borders, (eds) Saaler, Sven and Koschmann, Victor (New York: Routledge, 2007), pp. 1â18.
[15] For a thorough discussionâand critiqueâof anarchismâs alleged lack of complexity, see: Jun, Nathan, Anarchism and Political Modernity (New York: Continuum Books, 2012).
[16] Farmers, believed to be the main revolutionary subjects, were the main targets of the groupâs agitation.
[17] Conrad, Sebastian and Sachsenmaier, Dominik (eds), Competing Visions of World Order: Global Moments and Movements, 1880sâ1930s (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), p. 14.
[18] On the different, yet similar, communal projects the world over, see: Morris-Suzuki, Tessa, âBeyond Utopia: New Villages and Living Politics in Modern Japan and across Frontiersâ, History Workshop Journal, vol. 85, 2018, pp. 47â71; Rahav, Shakhar, âHow shall we Live?: Chinese Communal Experiments after the Great War in Global Contextâ, Journal of World History, vol. 26, no. 3, 2016, pp. 521â548; Taylor, Antony, ââSeptic Edensâ: Surveillance, Eroticized Anarchy and âDepraved Communitiesâ in Britain and the Wider World, 1890â1930â, in Global Anti-Vice Activism: Fighting Drinks, Drugs and âImmoralityâ, 1890â1950, (eds) Pliley, Jessica R., Kramm, Robert and Fischer-TinĂ©, Harald (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2016), pp. 53â73; and Sargeant, Lyman Tower, Utopianism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010).
[19] This larger argument of anarchist knowledge production and circulation, particularly through translations, is based on Konishi, Sho, Anarchist Modernity: Cooperatism and Japanese-Russian Intellectual Relations in Modern Japan (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2013).
[20] Crump, John, Hatta ShĆ«zĆ and Pure Anarchism in Interwar Japan (New York: St. Martinâs Press, 1993), p. 32.
[21] An overview of Japanâs anarchist movement and the waves of state repression against its proponents is provided by Komatsu, RyĆ«ji, Nihon anakizumu undĆshi (Tokyo: Aoki shinsho, 1972).
[22] Asaba, Michiaki, AnÄkizumu: Meicho deta dor nihon shisĆ nyĆ«mon (Tokyo: Chikuma Shinsho, 2004), pp. 61â62.
[23] HĂ©lĂšne Raddeker has integrated anarchist terrorism, with its fatal and tragic moments, in a longer tradition of twentieth-century Japanese radicalism that often evolved around themes of vengeance and martyrdom. Raddeker, HĂ©lĂšne Bowen, Treacherous Women of Imperial Japan. Patriarchal Fictions, Patricidal Fantasies (New York: Routledge, 1997), p. 131.
[24] Hagiwara, ShintarĆ, Nihon anakizumu rĆdĆ undĆshi (Tokyo: Gendai Shichosha, 1969).
[25] Crump, **Hatta ShĆ«zĆ**, p. 33.
[26] Ibid., pp. 101â103.
[27] Nishiyama, Taku, Ishikawa SanshirĆ no yĆ«topia: Shakai shisĆ to jissen (Tokyo: TĆjishobĆ, 2007).
[28] Bookchin, Murray, Social Ecology and Communalism (Oakland, CA: AK Press, 2006), pp. 89â99.
[29] Ibid., p. 80.
[30] sha, NĆson seinen, âSaikin undĆ no soshiki narabi ni keitai nit suite no ichi teianâ, in 1930 nendai ni okeru nihon anakizumu kakumei undo: ShiryĆ nĆson seinen sha undoshi, (ed.) NĆson seinen sha undoshi kankĆkai (Tokyo: Unita shoho, 1972 [1931]), p. 130.
[31] Crump, **Hatta ShĆ«zĆ**, p. 179.
[32] The term âimperial democracyâ is borrowed from Gordon, Andrew, Labor and Imperial Democracy in Prewar Japan (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991).
[33] Hosaka, Masayasu, NĆson seinen sha jiken: ShĆwa anakisuto no mita maboroshi (Tokyo: Chikuma ShobĆ, 2011); Mihara, YĆko, âNĆson Seinen Sha to Gendaiâ, in NĆson Seinen Sha Sono Shiso to Tatakai, (ed.) KenkyĆ«kai, Hiroshima Museifushugi (Hiroshima: Hiroshima Museifushugi KenkyĆ«kai, 1988); and Crump, John, The Anarchist Movement in Japan (London: ACF, 1996), respectively, offer very rare contextualization of the NĆson Seinen Sha within the Japanese anarchist movement.
[34] Scott, **The Art of Not Being Governed**, p. 127.
[35] Crump, **The Anarchist Movement in Japan**, p. 11. Gavin, Masako and Middleton, Ben (eds), Japan and the High Treason Incident (New York: Routledge, 2013).
[36] For an overview of Japanâs rural history at the end of the nineteenth and in the first half of the twentieth centuries, see Waswo, Ann, âThe Transformation of Rural Society, 1900â1950â, in The Cambridge History of Japan, Vol. 6, (ed.) Duus, Peter (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), pp. 541â605.
[37] Havens, Thomas R. H., Farm and Nation in Modern Japan: Agrarian Nationalism, 1870â1940 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1974), pp. 151â152.
[38] Francks, Penelope, Rural Economic Development in Japan: From the Nineteenth Century to the Pacific War (New York: Routledge, 2006), pp. 193â218.
[39] Manchuria also promised to be a place of opportunity for imperial Japanâs dissidents. Young, Louise, Japanâs Total Empire: Manchuria and the Culture of Wartime Imperialism (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999).
[40] Tipton, Elise K., Modern Japan: A Social and Political History (New York: Routledge, 2002), p. 111.
[41] Harootunian, Harry D., Overcome by Modernity: History, Culture and Community in Interwar Japan (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000).
[42] Akaba, Hajime, âNĆmin no fukuinâ, KyĆgaku panfuretto, vol. 6, 1929 [1910], pp. 18â19. This issue, however, was censored and republished in, among others, **Meiji Bunka ShiryĆ SĆsho**, Vol. 5 (Tokyo: Kazama, 1960), pp. 287â304.
[43] Konishi, Sho, âOrdinary Farmers Living Anarchist Time: Arishima Cooperative Farm in Hokkaido, 1922â1935â, Modern Asian Studies, vol. 47, no. 6, 2013, pp. 1845â1887, p. 1846.
[44] Tipton, **Modern Japan**, p. 115.
[45] Havens, **Farm and Nation in Modern Japan**, p. 8.
[46] Harootunian, **Overcome by Modernity**, p. 28.
[47] Vlastos, Stephen, âAgrarianism without Tradition: The Radical Critique of Prewar Japanese Modernityâ, in Mirror of Modernity: Invented Traditions of Modern Japan, (ed.) Vlastos, Stephen (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), pp. 83â93.
[48] Crump, **The Anarchist Movement in Japan**, pp. 121 and 146.
[49] Konishi, **Anarchist Modernity**, Chapter 6.
[50] Stolz, Robert, âSo Youâve ConvergedâNow What? The Convergence of Critiqueâ, Japanese Studies, vol. 34, no. 3, 2014, pp. 307â323, p. 317.
[51] Konishi, **Anarchist Modernity**, p. 339.
[52] Hosaka, **NĆson seinen sha jiken**, p. 86.
[53] Konishi, âOrdinary Farmers Living Anarchist Timeâ, p. 1846.
[54] Miyazaki, Akira, âNĆmin ni yobuâ, in NĆson Seinen Sha ShiryĆ: Shakai Mondai ShiryĆ SĆsho 1/12, (ed.) KenkyĆ«kai, Shakai Mondai ShiryĆ (Kyoto: Yutaka, 1972 [1930]), p. 511.
[55] Ibid., p. 527.
[56] For an analysis of rice in modern Japanese history, refer to Ohnuki-Tierney, Emiko, Rice as Self: Japanese Identities through Time (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993).
[57] Barrett, George, Anarchist Revolution (London: Freedom Press, 1920, 2nd edn [1912]), p. 13.
[58] Miyazaki, âNĆmin ni yobuâ, p. 518.
[59] Ibid., p. 526.
[60] Ibid., p. 523.
[61] Ibid., p. 525.
[62] Ibid., pp. 527â528.
[63] Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty, âCan the Subaltern Speak?â, in Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture, (eds) Nelson, Cary and Grossberg, Lawrence (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1988), pp. 271â313.
[64] Bookchin, **Social Ecology and Communalism**, p. 79.
[65] NĆson Seinen Sha, âSaikin undĆ no soshiki narabi ni keitai nit suite no ichi teianâ, p. 125.
[66] Crump, **The Anarchist Movement in Japan**, pp. 69â71.
[67] NĆson Seinen Sha, âSaikin undĆ no soshiki narabi ni keitai nit suite no ichi teianâ, p. 125.
[68] Ibid., p. 128.
[69] Ibid., pp. 128 and 130.
[70] Crump, **Hatta ShĆ«zĆ**, p. 177.
[71] For comparative purposes, see, among others, Wedemeyer-Kolwe, Bernd, âDer neue Menschâ: Körperkultur im Kaiserreich und in der Weimarer Republik (WĂŒrzburg: Königshausen and Neumann, 2004); Grant, Susan, Physical Culture and Sport in Soviet Society: Propaganda, Acculturation, and Transformation in the 1920s and 1930s (New York: Routledge, 2013); Alter, Joseph S., âGandhiâs Body, Gandhiâs Truth: Nonviolence and the Biomoral Imperative of Public Healthâ, Journal of Asian Studies, vol. 55, no. 2, 1996, pp. 301â322.
[72] McInnes, Neil, âThe Labour Movement: Socialists, Communists, Trade Unionsâ, in The Impact of the Russian Revolution, 1917â1967, (ed.) Royal Institute of International Affairs (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1967), p. 37.
[73] Russell, Bertrand, Bolshevism: Practice and Theory (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Howe, 1920).
[74] Miyazaki, âNĆmin ni yobuâ, pp. 532â533.
[75] Ibid., p. 535.
[76] Suzuki, Yasuyuki, Nihon museifushugi undĆshi (Tokyo: Kokushoku sensensha, 1990 [1932]), pp. 56â57.
[77] Ibid., p. 59.
[78] Barrett, **Anarchist Revolution**, p. 18; Pliley, Jessica R., Kramm, Robert and Fischer-TinĂ©, Harald (eds), Global Anti-Vice Activism: Fighting Drinks, Drugs and âImmoralityâ (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2016), p. 14; Durkheim, Ămile, The Division of Labour in Society (London: Macmillan, 1984 [1893]), p. 11; Neumann, Boaz, âThe Phenomenology of the German Peopleâs Body (Volkskörper) and the Extermination of the Jewish Bodyâ, New German Critique, vol. 36, no. 1 (106), 2009, pp. 149â181.
[79] Suzuki, **Nihon museifushugi undĆshi**, pp. 81â82.
[80] Konishi, **Anarchist Modernity**, p. 340.
[81] Chakrabarty, Dipesh, Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000), p. 16.
[82] Miyazaki, âNĆmin ni yobuâ, pp. 516â517.
[83] Christie, Clive, Ideology and Revolution in Southeast Asia, 1900â1980 (Richmond: Curzon, 2001), pp. 40â43.
[84] NĆson Seinen Sha, âSaikin undĆ no soshiki narabi ni keitai nit suite no ichi teianâ, pp. 125â126.
[85] Chatterjee, Partha, The Nation and its Fragments: Colonial and Postcolonial Histories (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993), p. 10.
[86] On race and racism in the Japanese empire, see Heé, **Imperiales Wissen und koloniale Gewalt**; Fujitani, Takashi, Race for Empire: Koreans as Japanese and Japanese as Americans during World War II (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011).
[87] NĆson Seinen Sha, âSaikin undĆ no soshiki narabi ni keitai nit suite no ichi teianâ, p. 128.
[88] Crump, **Hatta ShĆ«zĆ**, p. 179.
[89] âNĆson seinen sha no kesseiâ, **Shinano Mainichi Shinbun**, 11 January 1937.
[90] âKokushoku kyosantoâ, **Maeil Shinbo**, 12 January 1937.
[91] keisatsubu, Naganoken, âHimitsu kessha nĆson seinen sha jiken ni kansuru kĆseki gaiyĆâ, in TokkĆ keisatsu kankei shiryĆ shĆ«sei, Vol. 20, (ed.) Fujio, Ogino (Tokyo: Fujishuppan, 1993 [1937]), p. 268.
[92] Naoyuki Umemori, âThe Historical Contexts of the High Treason Incident: Governmentality and Colonialismâ, in **Japan and the High Treason Incident**, (eds) Gavin and Middleton, p. 63.
[93] LĂŒdtke, Alf, âWas ist und wer treibt Alltagsgeschichte?â, in Alltagsgeschichte: Zur Rekonstruktion historischer Erfahrungen und Lebenswelten, (ed.) LĂŒdtke, Alf (Frankfurt/M. and New York: Campus, 1989), p. 11.