THE SCIENCE OF SYMBIOSIS AND
LINGUISTIC DEMOCRACY IN EARLY
TWENTIETH-CENTURY JAPAN

Sho Konishi

St. Antony's College, University of Oxford
Oxford, Great Britain

INDECS 13(2), 299-317, 2015
DOI 10.7906/indecs.13.2.8
Full text available here.
 

Received: 11 November 2014.
Accepted: 9 March 2015.
Regular article

ABSTRACT

Focusing on the early twentieth-century Japanese Esperantist and popular celebrity writer Miyazawa Kenji as an embodiment of a larger intellectual phenomenon of early twentieth century Japan, the essay delineates the scientific world view behind the Esperanto movement and corresponding internal logic that developed in the language movement's foundational years. It argues that Esperantism in Japan in its early years was not an isolated linguistic movement among a small number of leftist intellectuals, but part of a much larger intellectual, cultural, and social movement that reflected the particular scientific worldview of what I call 'anarchist science'. This worldview defied the conceptual bifurcations of 'modern vs. tradition' and 'nature vs. culture' in modern history. A history of its vision offers a fresh perspective on modern history, future visions of the past, and the historical meanings of Esperantism.

KEY WORDS

natural science, Miyazawa Kenji, symbiosis, Esperanto, linguistic democracy, childhood, anarchism

CLASSIFICATION

JEL:N35, O35


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