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Redacted

The Archives of Censorship in Transwar Japan

Jonathan Abel

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University of California Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Pädagogik

Beschreibung

At the height of state censorship in Japan, more indexes of banned books circulated, more essays on censorship were published, more works of illicit erotic and proletarian fiction were produced, and more passages were Xed out than at any other moment before or since. As censors construct and maintain their own archives, their acts of suppression yield another archive, filled with documents on, against, and in favor of censorship. The extant archive of the Japanese imperial censor (1923-1945) and the archive of the Occupation censor (1945-1952) stand as tangible reminders of this contradictory function of censors. As censors removed specific genres, topics, and words from circulation, some Japanese writers converted their offensive rants to innocuous fluff after successive encounters with the authorities. But, another coterie of editors, bibliographers, and writers responded to censorship by pushing back, using their encounters with suppression as incitement to rail against the authorities and to appeal to the prurient interests of their readers. This study examines these contradictory relationships between preservation, production, and redaction to shed light on the dark valley attributed to wartime culture and to cast a shadow on the supposedly bright, open space of free postwar discourse. (Winner of the 2010-2011 First Book Award of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University)

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Schlagwörter

leisure reads, censorship japan, japanese isolation, quarantine books, censorship, wartime culture, nonfiction books, asian history, japanese empire, japanese culture, anthropology, books for history lovers, discussion books, japanese markets, life during war, japanese history, passion reads, rise of modern japan, east asia, pass on books, homeschool history books, postwar discourse, japanese imperialism, censorship system, learning while reading, 20th century japan, japanese economy