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Full Description
In modern Japan, anti-establishment ideas have related in many ways to Japan's capitalist development and industrialisation. Activist and intellectual Ishikawa Sanshir. exemplifies this imagination, connecting European and Japanese thought during the first decades of the twentieth century. This book investigates the emergence of a strand of non-violent anarchism, reassessing in particular the role of geographical thought in modern Japan as both a vehicle of political dissent and a basis for dialogue between Eastern and Western radical thinkers. By tracing Ishikawa's travels, intellectual interests and real-life encounters, Nadine Willems identifies a transnational 'geographical imagination' that valued ethics of cooperation in the social sphere and a renewed awareness of the man-nature interaction. The book also examines experiments in anarchist activism informed by this common imagination and the role played by the practices of everyday life as a force of socio-political change.
Contents
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements and Note on Transliteration
Introduction
Chapter 1: Humanising Science in Modern Japan
Chapter 2: Late Meiji Radicals and the Formation of a Geographical Imagination
Chapter 3: Breaking Boundaries
Chapter 4: Domin Seikatsu: Solidarity as a Political Strategy
Chapter 5: Standing on the Earth
Chapter 6: The Ecology of Everyday Life
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index