像国家一样思考:1900-1945年日本帝国的危险思想

IF 0.4 4区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Positions-Asia Critique Pub Date : 2022-02-01 DOI:10.1215/10679847-9417942
Max Ward
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要:本文探讨了1900年至1945年间日本警察对激进政治的理解和管理方式的变化。具体地说,本书追溯了警察的目标从20世纪强调政治组织、其活动、出版物和集会,转变为对表面上怀有威胁国家和资本的“危险思想”的个人进行监管的过程——到20世纪20年代末,警察将其归类为“思想犯罪”。一旦“思想”被确定为警务对象,日本警察机构就开始实践一种思想史——像国家一样思考——以区分危险思想,并在两次世界大战之间的社会经济动荡时期了解其起源和传播。借鉴Jacques ranci的警察理论,本文探讨了警察手册和其他出版物如何对某些思想、文本、声明和口号进行分类,并根据它们对帝国政体构成的假定危险程度进行分发。它揭示了危险思想的扩大分类和分布如何改变了20世纪20年代的治安,从而将帝国权力扩展到两次世界大战之间的日本社会生活的各个方面。
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Thinking Like a State: Policing Dangerous Thought in Imperial Japan, 1900–1945
Abstract:This article explores the changing ways the Japanese police understood and policed radical politics between 1900 and 1945. Specifically, it traces the process in which the objective of policing transformed from an emphasis on political organizations, their activities, publications, and assemblies in the 1900s to the policing of individuals ostensibly harboring "dangerous ideas" that were deemed threatening to state and capital—what the police came to categorize as "thought crime" by the late 1920s. Once "thought" was identified as an object for policing, Japanese police agencies began to practice a kind of intellectual history—thinking like a state—to distinguish dangerous thought and to understand its origin and its spread during the socioeconomic turbulence of the interwar period. Drawing on Jacques Rancière's theory of police, this article explores how police manuals and other publications categorized certain ideas, texts, enunciations, and slogans and distributed them based on the presumed degree of danger they posed to the imperial polity. It reveals how the expanded classifications and distributions of dangerous thought transformed policing in the 1920s, thereby extending imperial state power into various aspects of social life in interwar Japan.
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来源期刊
Positions-Asia Critique
Positions-Asia Critique ASIAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
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