连接第一世界或第三世界

Kei Takata
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摘要

本文对日本六十年代运动中的跨国联盟进行了社会学和历史学的考察。从20世纪60年代中期到70年代,日本的一些新左派运动通过参与跨国行动主义而取得了胜利。然而,这些运动已经分成两个方向;一方面是那些主要与西方第一世界有关的运动,另一方面是与第三世界革命运动有关的运动。本文探讨了这种跨国关系的弥合和分裂的原因。通过具体观察北黑仁的公民反越战运动和日本红军的秘密运动,本文认为,正是文化在网络集群之间架起了桥梁,也在网络集群之间制造了漏洞。通过对每个群体成员的文化(意识形态、信仰、品味等)和传记背景(阶级意识、一代和记忆)的调查,本文认为,活动家的文化和与外部世界的想象联系是弥合运动之间的结构性漏洞的关键因素,这些运动相距遥远,植根于不同的国家环境。然而,它也表明,这两个运动的成员的不同的文化和传记背景造成了他们所发展的跨国网络之间的文化漏洞。因此,总体而言,本文揭示了文化的两重性——桥接性和发散性——是如何在跨国网络建设过程中发挥作用的。
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Connecting with the First or the Third World
This paper is a sociological and historical investigation of the transnational alliances in the Japanese sixties movement. From the mid-1960s to 1970s, some Japanese New Left movements had prevailed by taking part in transnational activism. Yet, these movements had then bifurcated into two directions; those that were linked primarily with the western First World on the one hand and movements that were connected to the Third World revolutionary movements on the other hand. This paper explores the reasons for such bridging and division of transnational ties. By looking specifically at the civic anti-Vietnam War movement of Beheiren and the clandestine movement of the Japanese Red Army, the paper argues that it was the culture that had both bridged and created holes between the network clusters. Through investigation of the culture (ideology, beliefs, taste, etc.) and biographical backgrounds (class consciousness, generation, and memory) of each group member, the paper suggests that the activists’ culture and imaginative linkage with the outside world was the crucial factor in bridging the structural hole between movements that were remotely apart and embedded in different national settings. Yet, it also shows that different cultural and biographical backgrounds of the members of these two movements had created a cultural hole between the transnational networks that they have developed. Thus, in general, the paper shows how the duality of culture — bridging and diverging aspects — operates in the process of transnational network building.
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