by Leanne Ogasawara
SURREALISM, n. Psychic automatism in its pure state, by which one proposes to express — verbally, by means of the written word, or in any other manner — the actual functioning of thought. Dictated by the thought, in the absence of any control exercised by reason, exempt from any aesthetic or moral concern. —André Breton

It’s 1923. And a student grabs a book off a shelf. Running for his life, book held tight, he is just one step ahead of a massive earthquake that would shake the world for four long minutes. Out of the building, he joins the surging crowds on the streets of Tokyo. People are in deep shock, but the young man is calm, reading as he walks among them. The book he grabbed was a novel by William Morris called News from Nowhere. It’s a work of socialist utopianism.
According to Shuzo Takiguchi, who is considered to be one of Japan’s great surrealistic poets, this experience was the start of his life as a poet. Disaster as the start of things. But despite what he claimed, we know that he’d already turned away from medicine, which his parents so desperately hoped he would study, instead spending more and more time in the university library reading literature.
And so, the Great Kanto Earthquake was not so much the inciting incident, as the event that let him off the hook.
As soon as the trains were running again, he returned to his family home in the countryside, where he tried to become a teacher. When this didn’t work, he was persuaded to return to university in 1925, and that was when he met the poet and classics scholar Junzaburō Nishiwaki, who was well-known at university for having studied at Oxford. Together with a group of other poets, they founded a literary journal devoted to French surrealism, which by that time had become Japan’s most popular avant-garde movement. Read more »