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May 31, 2013

[SSJ: 8086] DIJ History & Humanities Study Group, 11 June, Arishima Takeo's 'One Manifesto' and its Legacy

From: The DIJ History and Humanities Study Group
Date: 2013/05/31

We would like to invite you to our upcoming DIJ History & Humanities Study Group on TUESDAY, 11 June 2013, 18:30.

Simone Mueller, Zurich University

Intellectuals and the 'Happiness' of the People: The Debate on Arishima Takeo's 'One Manifesto' and its Legacy

In the 1920s a discourse on the role of intellectuals for society and their relationship to the masses arose in Japan. This discourse, triggered by the strengthening of Marxism as a consequence of the October Revolution and the ensuing emergence of the Proletarian literary movement, is known under the t erm chishikijin ron. Its beginning is generally set in 1922, with the so cal led 'Debate on Arishima Takeo's article "Sengen hitotsu"' (One Manifesto ). In his manifesto, Arishima formulated a renunciation of the possibilities of the bourgeois intellectual to abdicate his own class, to join the proletarian movement and to write for the proletariat. Arishima's article was read as a denial of the intellectuals'
potential to effectively engage in class- struggle and precipitated a vibrant debate on the social mission of writers and the relationship of intellectuals and the working class. The whole debate made clear that two competing groups opposed each other: On the one side Marxists, on the other side bourgeois liberal humanists. The debate is of central significance for the self-referential intellectual discourse in Japan, as it raised basic questions about the social function of intellectuals and their responsibility for the people, or, to put it more poignantly, for thei r "happiness". In my presentation I will contextualize the debate and trac e its legacy, thus drawing a picture of the ideological struggles in the int ellectual field of inter- and postwar Japan.

PD Dr Simone Mueller studied Japanese and Chinese Studies as well as Philosophy at the University of Zurich, at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies and at Doshisha University. She is currently working at the Asia-Orient-Institute of the University of Zurich, teaching and conducting research on Japanese literature and intellectual history. Her post-doctoral thesis
(Habilitation) Torn Consciousness: Repetition and Difference in the Intellectual Discourse of Inter- and Postwar Japan [Das zerrissene Bewusstsein: Wiederholung und Differenz im japanischen Intellektuellendiskurs der
Zwischen- und Nachkriegszeit] is an analysis of the self-referential discourse of literates on the role and responsibility of intellectuals in 20th century Japan, in light of European, namely French, concepts of intellectualism.

The DIJ History and Humanities Study Group is a forum for young scholars including Ph.D. candidates in the field organized by Kristina Iwata-Weickgenannt, Susanne Klien and Torsten Weber. All are welcome to attend, but registration (weber[at]dijtokyo.org) is appreciated.

German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ) Jochi Kioizaka Bldg. 2F, 7-1 Kioicho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo; 102-0094, Phone: 03-3222-5077.

For a map please refer to www.dijtokyo.org

Approved by ssjmod at 11:03 AM