Japanese Socialists in 1918—1923: Between Reformism, Bolshevism and Anarchism

 
PIIS207987840014746-9-1
DOI10.18254/S207987840014746-9
Publication type Article
Status Published
Authors
Affiliation: Institute of World History RAS
Address: Russian Federation, Moscow
Journal nameISTORIYA
Edition
Abstract

The five years after the end of World War I turned out to be a key period in the history of the socialist movement in Japan, in many ways predetermining further directions in its development. After recovering from the defeat in 1911 and the subsequent decline in the so-called “winter period”, the socialists discovered syndicalist methods of action and began actively to work in the trade union movement. After 1918, they faced a difficult choice of path, and after initial attempts to create a common “Socialist League”, this led to a demarcation between the adherents of different socialist trends. Some of the socialists entered into an alliance with the leaders of the reformist trade unions and moved to the position of social democracy. Others preferred to choose the ideas and tactics of anarchism and anarcho-syndicalism. Finally, still others, under the influence of the Communist International and its work with the Japanese socialists, organized the Japanese Communist Party. Amidst the repression by the authorities, a stubborn struggle for influence in the labor movement flared up between supporters of all three trends. After 1923, Japanese socialism experienced a final split, and subsequently each of the three currents created their own political and trade union associations.

KeywordsAnarchists, Communist International, Communists, Japan, Socialists trade unions, workers` movement
Received18.12.2020
Publication date15.04.2021
Number of characters58437
Cite  
100 rub.
When subscribing to an article or issue, the user can download PDF, evaluate the publication or contact the author. Need to register.

Number of purchasers: 0, views: 299

Readers community rating: votes 0

1. V. I. Lenin i literatura zarubezhnogo Vostoka. Sbornik statej. M., 1971.

2. Nobushima E. K. Yaponiya // Rabochij put'. Organ russkikh anarkho-sindikalistov. Berlin, 1923. № 4. S. 12.

3. Nobushima E. K. V Yaponii // Anarkhicheskij vestnik. Organ ob'edinennykh anarkhistskikh organizatsij. Berlin, 1923. № 3-4. S. 71.

4. Sakon T. «Morito-Dziken» — Delo o privlechenii k sudu T. Morito za propagandu idej Kropotkina // Trudy Mezhdunarodnoj nauchnoj konferentsii, posvyaschennoj 150-letiyu so dnya rozhdeniya P. A. Kropotkina. Vyp. 3. M., 1995. S. 161—171.

5. A Brief History of Japanese Anarchism [Ehlektronnyj resurs]. URL: http://www.ne.jp/asahi/anarchy/anarchy/english/history1.html (data obrascheniya: 11.11.2020).

6. Beckmann G. M., Genji O. The Japanese Communist Party 1922—1945. Stanford, 1969.

7. Gordon A. Labor and Imperial Democracy in Prewar Japan. Berkeley; Los Angeles; Oxford, 1991.

8. Hoston G. A. Marxism and the Crisis of Development in Prewar Japan. Princeton, 1986.

9. Kishimoto E. The Characteristics of Labour — Management Relations in Japan and Their Historical Formation (2) // The Kyoto University Economic Review. Memoirs of the Faculty of Economics in the Kyoto University. 1966. Vol. 36. № 80. P. 17—38.

10. Li Pei-kan. Los mártires de Tokio // La Antorcha. Semanario anarquista. Buenos Aires, 23.04.1930. № 298. P. 3

11. Nobushima E. K. El movimiento obrero en Japón // Claridad. Santiago de Chile, 20.10. 1923. Vol. 4. № 110.

12. Ōsugi S. My Escapes from Japan. Tokyo, 2014.

13. Ôsugi Sakae in Paris // Libero International. 1978. № 5.

14. Pelletier P. Un oublié du consensus: l'anarchosyndicalisme au Japon de 1911 à 1934 // De l'histoire du mouvement ouvrier revolutionnaire. Actes du colloque international “Pour un Autre Futur”. P., 2001. P. 175—225.

15. Scalapino R. A. The Japanese Communist Movement, 1920—1966. Berkeley; Los Angeles, 1967.

16. Stanley T. A. Ōsugi Sakae, anarchist in Taishō Japan: The Creativity of the Ego. Cambridge (Massachusetts); L., 1982.

17. Schencking J. C. The great Kantō earthquake and the chimera of national reconstruction in Japan. N. Y.; Chichester, 2013.

18. Stanley T. A. A Japanese Anarchist`s Rejection of Marxism-Leninism // Selected Papers in Asian Studies: Western Conference of the Association for Asian Studies. New Series. Vol. 1. Paper № 1. Tucson: University of Arizona, 2016. URL: http://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=wcaaspapers (data obrascheniya: 11.11.2020).

19. Stolberg E.-M. Japanese Strategic and Political Involvement in Siberia and the Russian Far East, 1917—1922 // Imperial Japan and National Identities in Asia, 1895—1945. L.; N. Y., 2003. P. 43—68.

20. Tätigkeit des Sekretariats zum 2. Kongreß. Amsterdam, März 1925 // Die Internationale. 1925. № 5.

21. Yamanouchi A. The Early Comintern in Amsterdam, New York and Mexico City // The Shien or the journal of history. 2010. № 147. P. 99—139.

Система Orphus

Loading...
Up