The Nature of Emergency: The Great Kanto Earthquake and the Crisis of Reason in Late Imperial Japan

Science in Context 25 (1):103-126 (2012)
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Abstract

ArgumentHijōji was an important keyword in the militarist Japan of the 1930s. Previous scholarship has assumed that such language sprung from the global financial crisis of 1929, and subsequent diplomatic events. Our article demonstrates, however, that a full-bodied language of emergency was crafted well before the collapse of the global economy, and against the backdrop of the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923, which destroyed the Japanese capital. While previous “great earthquakes” had been opportunities to strengthen Japanese participation in the global project of science, this one led more dramatically to a crisis of reason, and indirectly contributed to the spiritual, anti-western, and anti-rational rhetoric of what became the “Showa Restoration.” This and other post-disaster landscapes, we argue, should be examined as compelling sites for the crafting of political language – sites of opportunity and meaning as well as trial. While the phrase “state of emergency” was coined under very different circumstances in post-war Britain, it gained power and charisma in Japan, and likely other places around the world, by its association with natural catastrophe. Thus did modern politics establish a new connection with the traditional realm of the sublime, and in the case of Japan, the supernatural. Emergency's ability to associate politics with nature would never disappear, and has perhaps even strengthened in the early twenty-first century.

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Citations of this work

Remediation, Time and Disaster.Anders Ekström - 2016 - Theory, Culture and Society 33 (5):117-138.

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References found in this work

The Development of" Mappō" Thought in Japan (II).Michele Marra - 1988 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 15 (4):287-305.
The Development of Mappō Thought in Japan (I).Michele Marra - 1988 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 15 (1):25-54.
Ishiwara Kanji and Japan's Confrontation with the West.Stephen E. Pelz & Mark R. Peattie - 1977 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 97 (3):344.

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