Negotiating censorship in modern Japan
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Negotiating censorship in modern Japan
(RoutledgeCurzon contemporary Japan series, 45)
Routledge, 2015
- : pbk
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Note
First published: 2013
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Censorship in Japan has seen many changes over the last 150 years and each successive system of rule has possessed its own censorship laws, regulations, and methods of enforcement. Yet what has remained constant through these many upheavals has been the process of negotiation between censor and artist that can be seen across the cultural media of modern society.
By exploring censorship in a number of different Japanese art forms - from popular music and kabuki performance through to fiction, poetry and film - across a range of historical periods, this book provides a striking picture of the pervasiveness and strength of Japanese censorship across a range of media; the similar tactics used by artists of different media to negotiate censorship boundaries; and how censors from different systems and time periods face many of the same problems and questions in their work. The essays in this collection highlight the complexities of the censorship process by investigating the responsibilities and choices of all four groups - artists, censors, audience and ideologues - in a wide range of case studies. The contributors shift the focus away from top-down suppression, towards the more complex negotiations involved in the many stages of an artistic work, all of which involve movement within boundaries, as well as testing of those boundaries, on the part of both artist and censor. Taken together, the essays in this book demonstrate that censorship at every stage involves an act of human judgment, in a context determined by political, economic and ideological factors.
This book and its case studies provide a fascinating insight into the dynamics of censorship and how these operate on both people and texts. As such, it will be of great interest to students and scholars interested in Japanese studies, Japanese culture, society and history, and media studies more generally.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Negotiating Censorship in Modern Japan 2. Censorship and Patronage in Meiji Kabuki 3. Seditious Obscenity / Obscene Seditions: The Radical Eroticism of Umehara Hokumei 4. The Censor as Critic: Ogawa Chikagoro and Popular Music Censorship in Imperial Japan 5. Kawabata's Wartime Message in Beautiful Voyage (Utsukushii tabi) 6. Banned Books in the Hands of Japanese Librarians: from Meiji to Postwar 7. Self-Censorship: The Case of Wartime Japanese Poetry 8. Kurosawa Akira's One Wonderful Sunday: Censorship, Context and Counter-discursive film 9. Censoring Tamura Taijiro's Biography of a Prostitute (Shunpuden) 10. Censoring Imperial Honorifics: A Linguistic Analysis of Occupation Censorship in Newspapers and Literature 11. "Art" Il-legally Defined? - A Legal and Art Historical Analysis of Akasegawa Genpei's Model Thousand-yen Note Incident 12. Parodying the Censor and Censoring Parody in Modern Japan
by "Nielsen BookData"