Artigo Revisado por pares

Right Angles: Examining Accounts of Japanese Neo-nationalism

2008; University of British Columbia; Volume: 81; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.5509/2008814537

ISSN

1715-3379

Autores

Matthew Penney, Bryce Wakefield,

Tópico(s)

Japanese History and Culture

Resumo

23 July 2007 a video short attached an online article in the New York Times proclaimed is asserting itself militarily. It is embracing right-wing nationalism. It is denying its wartime atrocities. And it is flirting with nuclear weapons.1 While the tone of the short sometimes bordered on the histrionic, its conclusions were consistent with a general trend in recent observations about social and political movements in Japan. Speculation about a popular shift the right in Japanese public opinion is currently rife in many overseas media outlets and academic journals. Japan's leaders are portrayed as mindful of a growing nationalist sentiment2 and keen abolish pacifist provisions in the nation's Constitution in order to make Japan permit war.3 Meanwhile, popular expressions of nationalism are found in comics and movies, in an enthusiasm for World Cup soccer, in an indignation over North Korean missiles and, far from least, in Japan's anxiety over China's emerging influence.4 [Nationalism, according Michael J. Green, a former US National Security Council director for Asian Affairs, characterizes the [Japanese] public mood these days.5 This focus on Japan's resurgent right-wing nationalism left many commentators unprepared explain the crushing defeat suffered by the Liberal Democratic Party in the 29 July 2007 Upper House election. In the space of a few weeks, the press went from describing the now former prime minister as a man leading Japan toward a new nationalism talking about

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