书评:《马鞍山故事:基奥瓦家族自传》Henrietta Tongkemha和Raymond Tongkemnha著

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Family History Pub Date : 2022-07-25 DOI:10.1177/03631990221116549
D. Ratliff
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The gender norms of mainstream society powerfully affected members of the JRA, as did the pervasive consumer culture of early 1970s Japan. However, should we conclude that these influences and the JRA members’ active embrace and enactment of these norms defined them? The chapter’s framing suggests that we should; its rich and lively contents suggest that we should not. The chapter raises questions for further research concerning the intersections between gender norms and activism in Shigenobu and other women activists, as well as their differently gendered portrayals in the mainstream media. While the first two chapters focus on nonstate actors on the Far Left, the last two examine the Far Right. In the early 1950s, “reverse course” became a phrase encapsulating the reactionary turn in Japanese society and politics under the Cold War, with transwar figures escaping the postwar purge and rehabilitating themselves into positions of power. While the phrase was no longer widely used by the late 1960s and early 1970s, the case studies of Kodama Yoshio and Sasakawa Ryoichi illustrate how the trend it referred to continued well into this period. One “Old Left” activist once quipped to the effect that postwar Japan has been on the “reverse course” trajectory for so long, by now it should be in the Stone Ages. However, the last two chapters of this book remind us that generational, class, and gender intersected in ways that preclude a simple portrayal of a linear movement backward in time. Here, one can question the author’s framing of his subjects of analyzes as “nonstate actors” of the Far Left and Right. As the author shows in vivid detail, Far Right activists of the transwar generation enjoyed state establishment connections and resources to a degree that casts doubt on their position as “nonstate actors.” The boundaries between state and nonstate were significantly blurred on the Far Right. On the Far Left, the boundaries were clear and to a degree that was likely higher than most when viewed in global context. While the capacity of social movements to unite and enable political change may have been “a high standard” that was generally not attained in the global 1960s, there were also significant differences in the degree of state (and mainstream society’s) exclusion of these social movements, as well as the degree to which the Sixties generation eventually came to embrace the political status quo. Overall, Mobilizing Japanese Youth is a valuable contribution to our understanding of youth mobilization in Cold War-period Japan. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

影响了工人阶级和学生青年活动家之间的动态。它还可以通过纳入年轻工人的声音和他们的生活史来进一步丰富——作者在下面关于红军的章节中提供了引人入胜的细节。本章通过追踪Shigenobu Fusako和Wakamiya Masanori的轨迹,并强调该团体在当地和全球的联系,提供了JRA的生动历史。其结论指出,志野步是通过她的宣传信息强化男性城邦性别等级制度的同谋。虽然作者以令人信服的细节说明了这种共谋,但人们可能会质疑它是否完全“掩盖”了志野部的意识形态愿景。主流社会的性别规范强烈影响着JRA的成员,20世纪70年代初日本普遍存在的消费文化也是如此。然而,我们是否应该得出结论,这些影响以及JRA成员对这些规范的积极接受和颁布定义了它们?本章的框架表明,我们应该;它丰富而生动的内容表明我们不应该这样做。本章提出了一些问题,需要进一步研究Shigenobu和其他女性活动家的性别规范和激进主义之间的交叉点,以及她们在主流媒体中不同性别的描述。前两章关注极左翼的非国家行为者,后两章则关注极右翼。20世纪50年代初,“反向路线”成为一个短语,概括了冷战时期日本社会和政治的反动转变,跨战争人物逃离了战后的清洗,重新掌权。虽然这个短语在20世纪60年代末和70年代初不再被广泛使用,但Kodama Yoshio和Sasakawa Ryoichi的案例研究表明,它所指的趋势是如何持续到这一时期的。一位“老左派”活动人士曾打趣道,战后的日本长期以来一直处于“逆向”轨道上,现在应该已经进入石器时代了。然而,本书的最后两章提醒我们,代际、阶级和性别的交叉方式排除了对时间向后线性运动的简单描述。在这里,人们可以质疑作者将他的分析对象定义为极左翼和右翼的“非国家行动者”。正如作者生动详细地展示的那样,跨战争一代的极右翼活动家享有国家机构的联系和资源,这在一定程度上让人怀疑他们作为“非国家行为者”的地位。在极右翼,国家和非国家之间的界限明显模糊。在极左翼,界限是明确的,从全球背景来看,其程度可能比大多数人都要高。虽然社会运动团结起来并促成政治变革的能力可能是20世纪60年代全球普遍没有达到的“高标准”,但国家(和主流社会)对这些社会运动的排斥程度也存在显著差异,以及60年代一代最终接受政治现状的程度。总的来说,动员日本青年是对我们理解冷战时期日本青年动员的宝贵贡献。评论家感谢这本书的见解和丰富的说明性材料,以及它提出的问题,但不感谢Sasakawa爷爷的《消防安全之歌》。
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Book Review: Stories from Saddle Mountain: Autobiographies of a Kiowa Family by Henrietta Tongkeamha and Raymond Tongkeamnha
affected the dynamics between working class and student youth activists. It could also have been further enriched through the inclusion of the voices of young workers and their life histories—something the author provides in fascinating detail in the following chapter on the Red Army. This chapter provides a lively history of the JRA by tracing the trajectories of Shigenobu Fusako and Wakamiya Masanori and highlighting the local and global connections of the group. Its conclusion points out that Shigenobu was complicit in reinforcing the gender hierarchy of a masculine polis through her propaganda messages. While the author illustrates this complicity in convincing detail, one can question if it completely “eclipsed” Shigenobu’s ideological visions. The gender norms of mainstream society powerfully affected members of the JRA, as did the pervasive consumer culture of early 1970s Japan. However, should we conclude that these influences and the JRA members’ active embrace and enactment of these norms defined them? The chapter’s framing suggests that we should; its rich and lively contents suggest that we should not. The chapter raises questions for further research concerning the intersections between gender norms and activism in Shigenobu and other women activists, as well as their differently gendered portrayals in the mainstream media. While the first two chapters focus on nonstate actors on the Far Left, the last two examine the Far Right. In the early 1950s, “reverse course” became a phrase encapsulating the reactionary turn in Japanese society and politics under the Cold War, with transwar figures escaping the postwar purge and rehabilitating themselves into positions of power. While the phrase was no longer widely used by the late 1960s and early 1970s, the case studies of Kodama Yoshio and Sasakawa Ryoichi illustrate how the trend it referred to continued well into this period. One “Old Left” activist once quipped to the effect that postwar Japan has been on the “reverse course” trajectory for so long, by now it should be in the Stone Ages. However, the last two chapters of this book remind us that generational, class, and gender intersected in ways that preclude a simple portrayal of a linear movement backward in time. Here, one can question the author’s framing of his subjects of analyzes as “nonstate actors” of the Far Left and Right. As the author shows in vivid detail, Far Right activists of the transwar generation enjoyed state establishment connections and resources to a degree that casts doubt on their position as “nonstate actors.” The boundaries between state and nonstate were significantly blurred on the Far Right. On the Far Left, the boundaries were clear and to a degree that was likely higher than most when viewed in global context. While the capacity of social movements to unite and enable political change may have been “a high standard” that was generally not attained in the global 1960s, there were also significant differences in the degree of state (and mainstream society’s) exclusion of these social movements, as well as the degree to which the Sixties generation eventually came to embrace the political status quo. Overall, Mobilizing Japanese Youth is a valuable contribution to our understanding of youth mobilization in Cold War-period Japan. The reviewer is grateful for the book’s insights and richly illustrative material, as well as the questions it raises, but not for Grandpa Sasakawa’s “Fire Safety Song” now stuck inside his head.
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Family History is an interdisciplinary journal that publishes scholarly research from an international perspective concerning the family as a historical social form, with contributions from the disciplines of history, gender studies, economics, law, political science, policy studies, demography, anthropology, sociology, liberal arts, and the humanities. Themes including gender, sexuality, race, class, and culture are welcome. Its contents, which will be composed of both monographic and interpretative work (including full-length review essays and thematic fora), will reflect the international scope of research on the history of the family.
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