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The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus Newsletter
 
Newsletter No. 23. 2014    

June 9, 2014    

New Articles Posted

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In This Issue
 
Gavan McCormack 

   Jeff Kingston     

Komori Yoichi   

 
Greetings!  
 
On the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Tiananmen massacre of June 4, 1989, we reveal the surprising fact that George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four is alive and well in China, in translation. Along with Animal Farm. Find out about it in Michael Rank's report on Big Brother's availability in Chinese bookshops even as internet censorship tightens. But are we past the time when Orwell can be read sanctimoniously as a critique of the totalitarian other, or does he speak to the post-Snowden global condition? Jeff Kingston provides a major overview of the Abe administration's attempts to impose nuclear power on Japan in the face of continued popular opposition, noting that the long anticipated energy shortfall has not materialized while the massive problems of the Fukushima plants continue unabated. Literary critic Komori Yoichi offers surprising insight into Japan's protracted movement to defend Article 9, linking the issues to the movement for economic justice which has been largely invisible outside Japan. New insight into the determined US-Japan plan to impose the new Henoko base on a recalcitrant Okinawa is presented in four new translations by Gavan McCormack on the current struggle.

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Gavan McCormack       
Introduction and Four Texts translated from Japanese   

Tension in and around Okinawa rises. The Abe Shinzo government repeatedly assures Washington that the base it promises to construct for the US Marine Corps at Henoko in Northern Okinawa will proceed, come what may. The process of construction of a massive new military facility on a region that is at Okinawan law reserved for the very highest level of protection for its rich biodiversity is described in joint US-Japan communiques as "commitment to reducing the base hosting impact on Okinawa." Henoko construction has been made a condition for the return of the existing Futenma Marine Air Station in Ginowan City, upon whom, as a result, the "burden" would be lessened. Yet from 1996 to today, Okinawa has consistently and effectively resisted all such attempts to build a new base.

Here, the author expands APJ's ongoing coverage of the crisis by presenting four English language translations of recent related writings: two editorials from Okinawan daily newspapers, an impassioned plea from Nago City author Urashima Etsuko, and a short report on the discovery of significant numbers of the endangered dugong in the Henoko Bay vicinity. Through their writings and protests Okinawans continue to assert their rights as citizens in whom, under the constitution, sovereignty resides.    

Gavan McCormack is an emeritus professor of Australian National University and coordinator of The Asia-Pacific Journal. He is co-author with John Dower of the recently published Tenkanki no Nihon e - Pax Americana ka Pax Asia ka (NHK Bukkusu, 2014).


Jeff Kingston 
After 3.11:
Imposing Nuclear Energy on a Skeptical Japanese Public 
In April 2014 Prime Minister Abe unveiled Japan's new national energy strategy, reinstating nuclear energy as a key source of energy even as the shambolic cleanup and decommissioning at  Fukushima Daiichi lurches from one blunder to the next malfunction, and radiation-contaminated groundwater flows into the ocean. This is a major milestone in the comeback of nuclear energy despite a seemingly endless cascade of damning revelations about lax safety practices and perfunctory oversight since the three reactor meltdowns in March 2011. 2014 may be Japan's last nuclear free summer for the next few decades as pressure is mounting to restart some of Japan's 48 idled reactors.

Why has Fukushima not been a game changing event? In this article, the author articulates the considerable policymaking advantages enjoyed by the institutions of Japan's nuclear village (principally the utilities, big business, the bureaucracy and the Diet). Kingston argues that Abe's nuclear renaissance is possible because the nuclear village has been relatively successful in damage control while also working the corridors of power and backrooms where energy policy is decided. The reinstatement of nuclear energy in the 2014 national energy policy marks a victory for the nuclear village, a remarkable example of institutional resilience in the face of extremely adverse developments since the massive earthquake and tsunami struck. 

Jeff Kingston is the Director of Asian Studies, Temple University Japan. He is the editor of Natural Disaster and Nuclear Crisis in Japan: Response and Recovery after Japan's 3/11, Routledge 2012 and the author of Contemporary Japan, London: Wiley 2013.

Komori Yoichi 
Japan's Article 9 and Economic Justice:
The Work of Shinagawa Masaji
Introduced by Norma Field
Translated by Miho MATSUGU
Shinagawa Masaji, the dean of Japan's progressive financial leaders of the postwar era, is the subject of this memorial tribute. The author elaborates on Shinagawa's commitment to the "no-war clause," as well as his years of union activism and espousal of "revisionist capitalism." Shinagawa's example prompts wide-ranging comparison, whether to Nordic models (see the intriguing comparison recently published by APJ on Sweden and Japan's policies in the face of financial crisis), or in another era of US capitalism, Henry Ford's brand of investment in anti-union employee well-being and espousal of pacifism. The author, who also serves as executive secretary of the Article 9 Association, emphasizes Shinagawa's impassioned commitment to both the antiwar and economic justice causes, at a time when popular understanding  tends to separate advocates of the two causes. 

Komori Yoichi is a scholar of modern Japanese literature at the University of Tokyo. His numerous books include The Voices of the Dead, the Words of the Living: In Pursuit of Nuclear Japan through Literature (Shinnihon Shuppansha, 2014).  
  
Miho Matsugu has taught Japanese language and literature at Grinnell College in Iowa and DePaul University in Chicago. 
  
Norma Field is Robert S. Ingersoll Distinguished Service Professor Emerita, University of Chicago and a Japan Focus Associate.  


Michael Rank
Orwell in China: Big Brother in every bookshop    

In this article, Michael Rank explores dystopian author George Orwell's intellectual and political interest in China during the 1930s and 1940s. Orwell voiced his anger over Japan's invasion of China and spoke about Chinese resistance in several BBC scripts. He was appalled at the eye-witness stories of extreme Japanese cruelty that came to his attention at the BBC. With unusual insight, he dated the beginning of World War II not to the German invasion of Poland in 1939 but to the Japanese invasion of northeast China in 1931. The author also considers China's interest in Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-four and Animal Farm through a close examination of the history of translation and publication of the two works in the PRC.

Michael Rank is a British journalist and translator. He was a Reuters correspondent in China from 1980 to 1984, followed by two years in east and southern Africa. He has written about Tibet in the 1920s for the Bulletin of Tibetology as well as news reports.