Established in 1974, the Journal of Japanese Studies features original, analytically rigorous articles from across the humanities and social sciences, including comparative and transnational scholarship in which Japan plays a major part

Shogimen 40:1

ABSTRACT

 

TAKASHI SHOGIMEN
Censorship, Academic Factionalism, and University Autonomy in Wartime Japan:
The Yanaihara Incident Reconsidered

 

The Yanaihara Incident is well known as an example of the wartime Japanese suppression of academic freedom. However, it remains unclear why Yanaihara Tadao had to leave the Imperial University of Tokyo. This historical reconstruction of the incident in the contexts of the pacifist movement among mukyōkai Christians, the mechanism and dynamic of censorship, and academic politics at the Faculty of Economics at the Imperial University of Tokyo reveals that while academic factionalism served as a catalyst for Yanaihara’s downfall, the tenure of the professor depended ultimately on the university’s president alone. The Yanaihara Incident epitomizes the practical difficulties of defending university autonomy.

 

Volume 40, Number 1 (Winter 2014)
© 2014 Society for Japanese Studies