My Escapes from Japan

Author:   Sakae Osugi ,  Michael Schauerte ,  Yutaka Osugi
Publisher:   Doyosha
ISBN:  

9784907511166


Pages:   186
Publication Date:   06 November 2014
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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My Escapes from Japan


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Overview

A Japanese anarchist on the run in 1920s Shanghai and Paris. He handed me the bundle and I jumped on the train. As it left the station, I saw W. on the platform, his hand raised to bid me farewell. I signaled back the same; my final goodbye to the comrades in Japan. On December 11, 1922, Osugi Sakae snuck out of his house in Tokyo, ducking the watchful eyes of the police, to begin a journey to Europe to attend an international anarchist congress. This final work by Osugi, published in October 1923, is a collection of his writings about that trip (interspersed with memories of an earlier escape from Japan). The trip takes him first to Shanghai and then on to Lyon and Paris. Along the way, he meets Russian migr es, Chinese and Korean nationalists, French bureaucrats, prostitutes, and midinettes, prison guards and inmates, and a cabaret dancer named Dolly. It was Osugi's last fling, just a few months before his life was cut short at the age of thirty-eight by the military police in Tokyo on September 16, 1923.

Full Product Details

Author:   Sakae Osugi ,  Michael Schauerte ,  Yutaka Osugi
Publisher:   Doyosha
Imprint:   Doyosha
Dimensions:   Width: 12.70cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.209kg
ISBN:  

9784907511166


ISBN 10:   4907511167
Pages:   186
Publication Date:   06 November 2014
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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OSUGI SAKAE was born in 1885, the son of a career military officer, and grew up in Niigata Prefecture. Moved to Tokyo in 1901 after expulsion from Nagoya Military Cadet School; enrolled the following year in Foreign Language College. In 1904, came into contact with the socialist movement through Heimin shimbun (Commoners' News), a radical, anti-war newspaper edited by Kotoku Shusui and Sakai Toshihiko. Married Hori Yasuko in 1906 and was arrested that year for taking part in a demonstration against a streetcar fare hike. Other arrests and prison sentences followed, including a sentence of two-and-a-half years for involvement in the 1908 Red Flag Incident. Released from prison in late 1910, around the time Kotoku and other radicals were sentenced to death for their alleged involvement in a plot to assassinate the emperor. In 1912, helped to revive the chilled radical movement through establishing the literary journal Kindai shiso (Modern Thought) with Arahata Kanson. The journal was published until 1916. That same year his love affairs with Ito Noe and Kamichika Ichiko led to a public scandal that ended his marriage. Subsequently began living with Ito, with whom he established the journal Bunmei hihyo in 1918. Traveled to Shanghai in 1920 to attend the Comintern's Conference of Far-Eastern Socialists. Attempted to form a united front with communists in 1921 through the newspaper Rodo undo (The Labor Movement), but soon parted ways with them. Departed Japan at the end of 1922 clandestinely to travel to Shanghai and then went on to Europe, where he hoped to attend an international anarchist conference. Arrested in France the following year for an incendiary speech delivered at a May Day meeting. Returned to Japan in July following his deportation from France. Abducted by the military police on September 16, 1923, and murdered along with Ito and his six-year-old nephew. A translator of numerous books, including Kropotkin's Mutual Aid, Darwin's The Origin of Species, and Fabre's Souvenirs entomologiques. His own works include Sei no toso (Struggle for Life; 1914), Rodo undo no tetsugaku (Philosophy of the Labor Movement; 1916), Kuropotokin kenkyu (Studies of Kropotkin; 1920), and Seigi o motomeru kokoro (Justice-Seeking Spirit; 1921); and the memoirs Gokuchuki (Prison Memoirs; 1919) and Jijoden (Autobiography; 1923).

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