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Press Freedom and the 26th Century Affair in Meiji Japan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
Extract
For a little over twenty years the Meiji press demonstrated a remarkable degree of vitality, resilience, and strength of purpose in the face of severely repressive laws of which the most onerous and irksome were those authorizing the government to ban and suspend publications. When, in March 1897, the 26th Century Affair culminated in the passage of revised press laws eliminating that dreaded power, the new freedom was largely the product of leadership which came from the press itself, and particularly from that part of the press often characterized as ‘conservative’, ‘right-wing’, ‘nationalist’ or even ‘ultra-nationalist’.
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References
1 Nihon, for example, has often been characterized as nationalistic or conservative. See Mason, R. H. P., Japan's First General Election, 1890, Cambridge, 1969, p. 117Google Scholar, where Kuga Katsunan's newspaper is described as ‘the Right-wing newspaper, the Nippon Shimbun’. A countervailing interpretation is found in Masao, Maruyama, ‘Kuga Katsunan—Hito to Shisō’, Chūō Koron, 02 1947, pp. 37–44Google Scholar; Masao, Maruyama, ‘Meiji Kokka no Shisō’, in Kenkyūkai, Rekishigaku, ed., Nihon Shakai no Shiteki Kyūmei, Tokyo, 1959, pp. 181–236.Google Scholar Much information about Kuga and his ideas can be found in Pyle, Kenneth B., The New Generation in Meiji Japan, Stanford, 1969.Google Scholar Excellent although brief biographies of Kuga are found in Yanagida, Izumi, ‘Kuga Katsunan’, in Sandai Genronjinshū, Tokyo, 1963, V, 119–82Google Scholar; Ozaki, Takeshirō, ‘Meiji no Shimbunjin—Kuga Katsunan’, Shūkan Jiji, 7, 14, 21 and 28 09, and 5 10 1968.Google Scholar It is apparent that contemporaries referred to the Kuga newspaper as either Nihon or Nippon according to their individual predelictions. The author of this article has chosen to call the newspaper Nihon, which is the reading his family recalls as being the one Kuga himself preferred. For biographical treatment and other materials regarding Takahashi Jiji, see Teitarō, Kawanabe, Jiji Genkōroku, Tokyo, 1899.Google Scholar
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10 Shimizu, , pp. 281–6.Google Scholar See also Jiichirō, Nomura, Bejukanwa, Tokyo, 1963.Google Scholar When he was released from prison, Nomura went to Ōsaka Asahi as henshūshomeinin or signer of editorials, a post for which he was thought to be ‘experienced’. Nomura's account, sixty-odd years later, in Shimizu, pp. 343–5.
11 Naitō, Konan, ‘Omoidebanashi’, Ōsaka Asahi, 3, 4, 5 and 7 01 1927Google Scholar, in Kojirō, Naitō, Naitō Konan Zenshū, Tokyo, 1971, II, pp. 737–8.Google Scholar
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16 ‘Shō-Wai Naikaku no Zentō’, Nihon, 24 09 1896, p. 1.Google Scholar
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20 The text of Matsukata's speech is found in Shimizu, pp. 231–3.
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24 ‘Matsukata Naikaku no Kōbōshi’ (see note 21).
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31 For an account of the effect of the 26th Century Affair on the Shimpotō, see the account of Ozaki Yukio, one of the party's more important leaders. Kankōkai, Ozaki Yukio Den, Ozaki Yukio Den, Tokyo, 1951, pp. 561–4Google Scholar; Shiga.
32 For a daily account of House of Peers politics during the 26th Century Affair, see Kankōkai, Konoe Atsumaro Nikki, Konoe Atsumaro Nikki, Tokyo, 1968, I.Google Scholar
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34 Shiga, , ‘The Progressives and the Goverment’.Google Scholar
35 Takeshige, Kudō, Teikoku Gikai Shikō, Tokyo, 1908, pp. 452–4.Google Scholar
36 Kazuo, Kojima, Ichi Rōseijika no Kaisō, Tokyo, 1951, pp. 29–30.Google Scholar
37 ‘Matsukata Naikaku no Kōbōshi’.
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