- Hasegawa Nyozekan
Infobox Writer
name = Hasegawa Nyozekan
caption = Hasegawa Nyozekan
birthdate =30 November 1875
birthplace =Tokyo ,Japan
deathdate =11 November 1969
deathplace =Tokyo ,Japan
occupation = writer, journalist
genre = literary criticism, essays
movement =
notableworks =
influences =
influenced = nihongo|Hasegawa Nyozekan|長谷川如是閑|Hasegawa Nyozekan|extra=30 November 1875 -11 November 1969 was thepen-name of asocial critic , andjournalist in Taishō andShowa period Japan . His real name was Hasegawa Manjiro. He was one of the most important and widely-read supporters ofliberalism anddemocracy in inter-war Japan.Biography
Nyozekan was born in the Fukagawa district of
Tokyo , as the son of Yamada Tokujiro. He was adopted into his paternal grandmother's family, and took their name of Hasegawa. Nyozekan was a student of the Tokyo Hogakuin legal school (now part ofChuo University . He graduated in 1898 with a degree incriminal law . He was hired byKuga Katsunan as a journalist in 1903, for the newspaper "Nihon". In 1907, he was scouted byMiyake Setsurei and changed to the "Nihon oyobi Nihonjin" ("Japan and the Japanese") magazine. A few years later, he returned to newspaper journalism by changing jobs to the "OsakaAsahi Shimbun ."His writings reveal his leftist political leanings, and in 1918, he resigned in protest after the newspaper was censured by the government.
In 1919, Nyokezan and fellow liberal journalist
Oyama Ikuo founded the political magazine "Warera" ("We"), in which they sought to promote political reform andsocial democracy , while combating Japan's ever growing militarism andultranationalism . In 1932, he published one of his most important works, Nihon fuashizumu hihan (Critique of Japanese Fascism), an analysis of the growing phenomena of "Japanese fascism ”.Increasing government repression and application of the
Peace Preservation Law s in the mid-1930s, resulted in Nyozekan’s arrest and a brief period in prison. This prompted Nyozekan to change to more subdued style, arguing that the Japanese people and national culture were inherently liberal, rational and democratic, and comparable to Britishclassical liberalism . Although he was forced to keep a low profile, he did not compromise his opposition to militarism andtotalitarianism .Surprisingly to some, although Hasegawa wrote essays protesting that journalism must remain neutral and above politics, he also wrote in favor of theGreater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere , in which he saw the potential for the favorable development of Asia economically and culturally under Asian, rather than European influence.In 1946, Hasegawa became a member of the
House of Peers for its last session before the abolition of theMeiji Constitution . In 1947, he was elected to theJapan Art Academy , and in 1948 he was awarded theOrder of Culture by the Japanese government.His grave is at the temple of Seirin-ji in
Bunkyō, Tokyo .ee also
*
Japanese literature
*List of Japanese authors References
*Hanneman, Mary. "Hasegawa Nyozekan and Liberalism in Modern Japan". University of Washington (2007). ISBN 978-1-905246-49-6
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