Culture, Nationalism...
Culture, Nationalism...
Culture, Nationalism...
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JAMES DORSEY
Culture,Nationalism,andSakaguchiAngo
347
Journalof JapaneseStudies, 27:2
?) 2001 Society for JapaneseStudies
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348 Journal of Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
the Japanese were opposed to war, any insinuation that the Japanese were
warlike, any comment that indicated living conditions in Japan would be
harmed by the war, any remark that revealed a Japanese shortcoming, and
any statement that might prompt public confusion.1 It was, as critic Taka-
hashi Haruo has written, a time when "the topic of things Japanese was no
longer an object for discussion but rather an absolute and sacred concept." 2
Somebody forget to tell Ango. From the opening lines of the essay, he
inverts the official hierarchy of cultural practices and artifacts in a string of
bombastic remarks:
I know next to nothing about traditionalJapaneseculture. I've never seen
the KatsuraDetached Palace which Bruno Tautpraisedso highly, nor am I
familiarwith his preciousMochizuki Gyokusen,Ike Taiga, TanomuraChi-
kuden, or Tomioka Tessai. As for his Hata Z6roku and Chikugen Saishi,
well, I've never even heardof them. For one thing,I'm not muchof a tourist,
so the towns and villages of our homeland, with all their various local cus-
toms and landmarks,are a mystery to me. On top of that,I was bornin what
Tautcalled the most vulgarcity in Japan,Niigata, and I adorethe striprun-
ning from Ueno to Ginza and the neon lights, both of which he despised. I
know none of the formalities of the tea ceremony,but I do know all about
getting rip-roaringdrunk.In my lonely home, I've never once given any-
thing like the tokonoma[alcove] a second thought.3
These lines set the tone for the remainder of the essay, which is essentially
a sustained attack on a wide range of Japanese cultural icons. The following
two passages, perhaps the most frequently cited in the secondary literature,
are representative:
More thantraditionalbeauty or intrinsicallyJapaneseforms, we need more
convenience in our daily lives. The destructionof the temples in Kyoto or
the Buddhiststatues in Nara wouldn'tbotherus in the least, but we'd be in
real troubleif the streetcarsstoppedrunning.
I couldn't care less if both Horyuijiand Byodoin burned to the ground.If
the need should arise, we'd do well to tear down Horyfijiand put in a park-
ing lot.4
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Dorsey: SakaguchiAngo 349
5. Ibid., p. 141.
6. HiranoKen, "Sakuhinkaisetsu,"in Ito Sei et al., eds., IshikawaJun, SakaguchiAngo,
Vol. 19 of Nihon gendai bungakuzenshu (Tokyo:K6dansha,1967), p. 419.
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350 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
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Dorsey: SakaguchiAngo 351
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352 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
10. Bruno Taut, "Nara," trans. (to Japanese from German) Shinoda Hideo, in Nihon
zakki,Vol. 2 of ShinmuraIzuruet al., eds., Tautozenshu (Tokyo:IkuseishaKod6kaku,1943),
pp. 179-80.
11. Inoue, Horyaji e no seishinshi, pp. 5-62. On Japan'sefforts to merge with Europe
and leave Asia behind (nyu-O,datsu-A), see HirakawaSukehiro, "Japan'sTurnto the West,"
trans.Bob TadashiWakabayashi,in Bob TadashiWakabayashi,ed., Modem Japanese Thought
(Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 30-97. For the subsequent reverse
course, "escape Europe/enterAsia" (datsu-O, nyu-A), see Tetsuo Najita and H. D. Harootu-
nian, "Japan'sRevolt Againstthe West," in ibid., pp. 207-72.
12. Ito Chtta, "Asukajidai no kenchiku," in Sekai bijutsu zenshu, Vol. 6 (Tokyo: Hei-
bonsha, 1928), pp. 27-28; quotedin Inoue, Horyujie no seishinshi, p. 196.
13. See Kakuzo Okakura,The Ideals of the East with Special Reference to the Art of
Japan (Rutland,Vt: CharlesE. Tuttle Co, 1970), p. 1. Donald Keene's remarkis made in
"JapaneseWritersand the GreaterEast Asia War,"Landscapesand Portraits(Tokyo:Kodan-
sha International,1971), p. 310.
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Dorsey: SakaguchiAngo 353
Someof my seniorcolleagueshaveclaimedthatthis[H6ryiji]wasanorigi-
nalideaconceivedby ShotokuTaishi.Whileit is unclearwhethertheidea
is indeedoriginal,one mightsaythattheHoryuiji
is a manifestation
of one
partof ShotokuTaishi'sspirit.ThoughShotoku'sidealswererealizedto
someextentduringhisownlifetime,it wasactuallyin thenextagethatthey
finallyreacheda fullerfruition.14
14. Ishida Mosaku, "Horyuji saiken hisaiken mondai no kiketsu," in Garan ronko--
bukkyokokogakuno kenkyu(Tenri:Yotokusha, 1948), p. 61; quoted in Inoue, Horyuji e no
seishinshi, p. 229.
15. Sakaguchi, "Shikan,"p. 136.
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354 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
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Dorsey: Sakaguchi Ango 355
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356 Journal of Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
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Dorsey: Sakaguchi Ango 357
and its gentle arts for centuries. Ango, too, "fled" to Kyoto to write "Nihon
bunka shikan," and the essay is filled with autobiographical tangents that
completely reshape the feel of the city. Finding the famous natural vistas
and temples of the Arashiyama area "unpleasantly cold and lifeless," Ango
discovers a Kyoto more in keeping with his heavy-drinking, hedonistic na-
ture. One of his favorite spots in the ancient capital is the all-but-forgotten
Kurumazaki Shrine. While most shrines encourage visitors to pray for
health, safe childbirth, or academic success, this one is different: though
"supposedly dedicated to the memory of somebody-or-other Kiyohara, a
scholar it seems, the real object of veneration is quite obviously the almighty
yen." 29 A second "shrine" for Ango is the Arashiyama Theater, a run-down
vaudeville hall with amateurish acts where relieving himself often meant
"wading through an ocean of urine just to make my way to the piss-pot." 30
This was Ango's Kyoto, Taut's precious ancient capital turned inside out
and upside down.
Other symbols of "Japaneseness" fall as well. Ango's claim of igno-
rance concerning the "various local customs and landmarks" of rural areas
is a poke at the ethnological discourse of Yanagita Kunio (1875-1962).
His joy over the replacement of an ancient wooden bridge with one of steel
is a rebuttal to Yasuda Yojiur's 1936 essay, "Nihon no hashi" (Japanese
bridges), in which Yasuda linked Japan's identity and fate to the heartrend-
ing old bridges of rural areas.31Ango also deals with the samurai tradition,
linked to the essence of the modern Japanese by Nitobe Inazo's Bushido,
and also figuring prominently in wartime propaganda.32Referring to Japan's
most famous tale of samurai loyalty and revenge, Chushingura (Treasury of
loyal retainers, 1748), Ango wrote:
It has only been 70 or 80 years since the end of these "samurai,"but the
stories seem like fairy tales to us now .... Make no mistake about it: most
Japanesetoday are keenly aware that revenge just doesn't suit them. Har-
29. Ibid., p. 128. Signs on the shrine groundsidentify the deity as the scholar Kiyohara
Yorinari(1122-89), and the practice describedby Ango in the essay (and paraphrasedhere)
was still alive at the time of my visit in March2000.
30. Ibid., p. 130. Ango's scatological reverie is anotherpoke at Taut, who detested the
filth hiddenbehind his glorious tokonoma.
31. Ibid., p. 124. Yasuda'sessay can be found in Yasuda YojuroSenshu, Vol. 2 (Tokyo:
Kodansha, 1971), pp. 19-47. For an analysis of the essay, see Alan Tansman, "Bridges to
Nowhere: Yasuda Yojuro'sLanguage of Violence and Desire," Harvard Journal of Asiatic
Studies, Vol. 56, No. 1 (June 1996), pp. 35-75. For a treatmentof the JapanRomantics as a
whole, see Kevin Doak, Dreams of Difference: The Japan RomanticSchool and the Crisis of
Modernity(Berkeley:Universityof CaliforniaPress, 1994).
32. Inazo Nitobe, Bushido: The Soul of Japan (Rutland,Vt: CharlesE. Tuttle Co, 1969).
For an example of how this legacy was linked to the war effort, see the "bible" of national
essence: RobertKing Hall, ed., KokutaiNo Hongi: CardinalPrinciples of the National Entity
of Japan, trans. John Owen Gauntlett(Cambridge,Mass.: HarvardUniversity Press, 1949),
especially pp. 144-46.
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358 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
Ango furtherdistances his Japan from this heritage by writing the word
"samurai"(and laterthe word "kimono"as well) in katakana,the syllabary
associatedwith words of foreign origin.
Ango leaves no icon unsullied and so is trueto his vision of the "highest
form of art":the farce.34In a 1932 essay on the genre, Ango had described
farce as "from start to finish a wild rampage[ranchikisawagi]" 35and re-
joiced in both its purityand its ability to breakthroughthe limitationsim-
posed by mimetic impulses and reason. By staging just such a "wild ram-
page" in the field of culturalnationalismwith his "Nihon bunka shikan,"
Ango succeeds in producingthe heady sense of liberation the genre can
induce. This sense of freedom was what made the essay such an anomaly
at that most repressivetime, and it was the reason Hirano Ken feared for
Ango's safety.
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Dorsey: SakaguchiAngo 359
38. Okuno Takeo, Sakaguchi Ango (Tokyo: Bungei Shunju Bunshun Bunk6, 1996),
p. 163. I have generallyquotedfromthe original 1972 editionof Okuno'sstudy.Here,however,
I quote from a revised edition publishedin 1996. I have not done a systematiccomparisonof
the two editions,but it seems thatthe revisions serve to emphasizeOkuno'sdeificationof Ango
as a voice of resistanceduringthe war.
39. Okuno,SakaguchiAngo (1972), pp. 327-29.
40. See Hy6do Masanosuke, Sakaguchi Ango (Tokyo: Kodansha, 1976), particularly
pp. 13-15.
41. Okuno,SakaguchiAngo (1972), p. 333.
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360 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
42. The attendancefigure is mentioned in Robert Adam Steen, "To Live and to Fall:
Sakaguchi Ango and the Question of Literature"(Ph.D. diss., Cornell University, 1995),
p. 226.
43. The book is SakaguchiAngo to Nakagami Kenji (Tokyo: Ota Shuppan,1996). The
new zenshuis SakaguchiAngo zenshu, 18 vols. (Tokyo:ChikumaShob6, 1998-2000).
44. KarataniKojin, "KindaiNihon no hihyo: Showa zenki II," in KindaiNihon no hihyo;
Showa henjo (Tokyo:FukutakeShoten, 1990), p. 155.
45. The other is Takeda Taijun. See Karatani'sdialogue (taidan) with Sekii Mitsuo,
"SakaguchiAngo no fuhensei o megutte," in Sekii Mitsuo, ed., SakaguchiAngo to Nihon
bunka,a special edition of Kokubungakukaishakuto kansho (September1999), p. 15.
46. KarataniK6jin, "'Nihon bunkashikan'ron," in SakaguchiAngo to NakagamiKenji,
p. 10. Karatanirecordsthe same misunderstandingin "Darakuni tsuite," ibid., p. 66, and again
in his dialogue with Sekii Mitsuo, "Fuhensei,"p. 13.
It should be noted that there is some small degree of dissention from the conventional
reading of Ango as a voice of resistance. Robert Steen, in his dissertation,notes three ex-
amples:Isoda Koichi in a taidan with Akiyama Shun, "SakaguchiAngo no seishin," Yuriika,
Vol. 7, No. 11 (December 1975), pp. 82-107; Ueno Takashi, "Kotei no und6," Kaie, Vol. 2,
No. 7 (July 1979), pp. 184-91; and Suzuki Sadami, "'Nihon bunka shikan'ni tsuite," Koku-
bungakukaishakuto kansho,Vol. 58, No. 2 (February1993), pp. 98-102. See Steen, "ToLive
and to Fall," p. 147. Steen himself argues that Ango's ideas are not inconsistentwith the war
effort (pp. 105-52, esp. pp. 105-6).
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Dorsey: SakaguchiAngo 361
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362 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
traditionis eternally born from within man himself, Ango dismisses the
physical destructionof Japanas essentially inconsequential:"Should To-
kyo be turnedto ruins,we lack nothing for building even a granderimperial
capital. Neither would we grieve much in turningthe roof tiles of the Ho-
ryuijiinto artillery."51In the context of this explicitly nationalisticcollec-
tion, Ango's "iconoclasm"appearsanythingbut subversive.
The same is true of "Shinju"(Pearls),a shortwork thatwalks the border
betweenessay and autobiography,publishedin the magazineBungei in June
1942. Though this work is problematicto the same degree and in many of
the same ways as "Nihon bunka shikan," there is no question that at one
level it is very much a paean to the pilots of the midget submarineswho
willingly and knowingly sacrificedtheir lives in the attackat PearlHarbor.
Ango expresses awe at the feat of these "superhumans"(chojin) who ex-
hibit the superiorfightingspiritof the Japanese.It originatesat the moment
men are called to duty.
TheParisiansandYankeesarecheerfulaboutit. Theymarchoff humming
to themselvesas theladiesthrowthemkisses.Thehummingemergesfrom
a subconscious beliefthattheirliveswill be spared;theirmentalstateis not
thatof a manstaringdeathin thefaceas he turnsto servehis motherland in
hertimeof crisis.TheJapanese,on theotherhand,arekeenlyawareof the
possibilityof deathfromthe momenttheyanswertheircall to duty.They
arenotcheerfulbutsolemn.Oneneedonlylookat ourgloriousvictoriesin
theGreater EastAsianWarto knowwhichof theseattitudesleadsto greater
heroismon thebattlefield.52
The overall message of "Shinju"is certainlymore complex than this pas-
sage suggests. Still, the fact remains that statementssuch as the above, and
Ango's wartimepublicationsas a whole, suggest a relationshipto the con-
temporaryregime that is far more complex than the conventionalreading
implies.
Interpretationspositing Ango's "Nihon bunka shikan" as a subversive
text arepredicatedon the essay's resistanceto the "IdeologicalState Appa-
ratuses" that were holding the nation togetherin this time of crisis. How-
ever, this is only half the story.Althusser's "RepressiveStateApparatuses"
were also at work, and in the conventionalreadingthere is an inexplicable
slippagebetween Ango's relationshipto the two: the ostensiblyoppositional
stance towardthe formerdid not, as one would expect, invoke the wrathof
the latter.This is a thirdreason to question the accepted interpretationof
"Nihonbunkashikan."
51. Sakaguchi Ango, "Dento no musansha," in Kume, ed., Tsuji shosetsushu, p. 105.
This very short essay originallyappearedin the magazine Chisei in May 1943. See Sekii Mi-
tsuo, "Nenpu,"SAZ,Vol. 13, p. 416.
52. SakaguchiAngo, "Shinju,"in SAZ,Vol. 2, pp. 385-86.
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Dorsey: Sakaguchi Ango 363
The essay appeared during the most repressive years of an extended gov-
ernment campaign to control discourse at all levels. As Jay Rubin's Injurious
to Public Morals demonstrates, modern Japan's government had little pa-
tience for disruptive voices, dealing with most under the Peace Preservation
Act (Chian Iji Ho).53 Promulgated in 1925, the law expanded in scope over
the years to include jurisdiction over organizations, movements, and even
ideas. It was evoked in the convictions of tens of thousands during the cul-
ture wars pitting "everything that was wholesomely Japanese [against] the
alien forces of sedition and decadence, their deadly germs always threaten-
54
ing to infect the sacred kokutai [national polity]."
The system of censorship and thought control really came to maturity
with the persecution of marxist critics and proletarian writers during the
1930s: author Kobayashi Takiji was killed by police during questioning in
February 1933, Communist Party leaders Sano Manabu and Nabeyama Sa-
dachika were imprisoned in June of the same year, and the statement of
recantation they issued from prison triggered an avalanche of ideological
conversions (tenko) among left-wing writers of all stripes.55Publishers were
also subjected to pressure, and by 1935 all legal left-wing publications had
been halted.56
At this point the range of acceptable speech was made narrower still.
While most of the censorship had been masterminded by the Home Minis-
try, beginning in 1936 the propaganda bureaus of the military services be-
gan to get involved as well. According to Rubin,
theirfanaticismmade them far more difficultto deal with thanthe ministry.
They saw Communists behind every hint of unorthodox thought and in-
sisted on complete cooperationwith the wareffort.... EspeciallyafterPearl
Harbor,fiction did not have to be either leftist-orientedor erotic to be un-
acceptable:the military did not want to see anything in print that did not
actively supportthe war.57
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364 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
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Dorsey: SakaguchiAngo 365
Anti-Intellectualismand a By-Product:Nationalism
Though it is true that various theories of Japanesenessare debunkedin
"Nihon bunkashikan,"the essay is not primarilyengaged with the issue of
national or culturalidentity. This ideological arenais simply-almost co-
incidentally-the site, or playground,for this particularroundin a different,
largerwar:the campaignto forge alternativesto the usually self-conscious,
often hyper-intellectual,and sometimes painfully contrived argumentsof
reason, the modern world's preferred mode of rhetoric. Because of his
unique backgroundin both classical Buddhist studies at Toy6 University
and French fiction and criticism at the privateacademy Athene Francais,
Ango was heir to the quest to breakthroughwhat some saw as the impasse
faced by the rational mind. Many of his works illustratethe pursuit of a
liberation from all theories, ideologies, and intellectual constructs in the
pursuitof a "purer,"more authenticmode of existence. Living throughan
age in which the specious applicationof reason for suspect (anddangerous)
purposeswas especially apparent,it is not surprisingthatAngo would seek
to somehow get under,behind, or anteriorto that distortingfilter.
This quest is what had led him to the genre of farce in that 1932 essay.
In the genre's "wild rampage"transgressingthe boundariesof realism and
mimesis, Ango sensed the potential for a grand liberationfrom the limits
imposed by the analyticalmind. The techniquemakingthis possible was the
rejectionof all discriminatinghierarchies.
Farceworksto affirmall sidesof man-completely,andwithoutleavinga
singlethingbehind.Whetherit be fantasies,dreams,death,rage,contra-
orambiguity,
diction,absurdity, farceattempts to affirmeverylastthingthat
is connectedto humanreality.Farceaffirmsnegations,it affirmsaffirma-
tions,andthenit affirmsthis.In theendit triesto takeeverythingrelatedto
60. Donald Keene notes this quest for evidence of intellectual resistanceto the war and
also provides several case studies of writers and their activities duringtimes of war in "The
Barren Years: Japanese War Literature,"MonumentaNipponica, Vol. 33, No. 1-4 (1978),
pp. 67-112.
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366 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
61. Sakaguchi, "Farce ni tsuite," p. 19. The playful, exaggeratedtone of this passage is
typical of the essay as a whole. "Farceni tsuite" is performative,demonstratingin its form
what it advocates in its message. It mischievously underminesthe conventions of its genre,
literarycriticism,for the purposeof opening the discourseto new possibilities.
62. SakaguchiAngo, "Bungakuno furusato,"in SAZ,Vol.7, p. 113. The translationshere
are mine. For a translationof the full essay, see Steen, "To Live and to Fall," pp. 239-49.
63. SakaguchiAngo, "Bungakuno furusato,"in SAZ,Vol. 7, p. 113. Akutagawawas a
touchstonefor many of the Japanesewriterswho sought, like Ango, to escape the impasse of
the intellect. See, for example, KobayashiHideo's 1927 criticaldebut, "AkutagawaRyfinosuke
no bishin to shukumei,"in Vol. 2 of Ooka Shohei et al., eds., ShinteiKobayashiHideo zenshu
(Tokyo: Shinchosha, 1979), pp. 235-40. Kobayashialso sharedAngo's nostalgic longing for
a literary realm antecedent to that contrivedby the intellect. See his 1933 essay "Koky6 o
ushinattabungaku,"in KHZ, Vol. 3, pp. 29-37. An English translationof this essay is avail-
able in Paul Anderer'sLiteratureof the Lost Home: Kobayashi Hideo, Literary Criticism,
1924-1939 (Stanford:StanfordUniversityPress, 1995), pp. 46-54.
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Dorsey: SakaguchiAngo 367
64. Sakaguchi,"Shikan,"
p. 122.
65. Ibid.,p. 125.
66. Ibid.,p. 126.
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368 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
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Dorsey: Sakaguchi Ango 369
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370 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
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Dorsey: Sakaguchi Ango 371
Beauty for beauty's sake is not sincere; it is not, in the end, authentic...
Just look-planes fly overhead,iron warshipsply the seas, trainsclatterby
on elevated rails. Our day-to-daylives are healthy and as long as this is so
our culture is healthy, even if we do pride ourselves on replicating cheap
Western-styleprefabs.Ourtraditions,too, are healthy.74
A fidelity to personal needs translates directly into the nation's well-being.
Though Ango's appeal to everyday necessities as the root of culture ap-
pears to liberate him from a repressive ideology of nation, an equally limit-
ing mode of thought takes its place. For Ango the proper mode of being,
and of being Japanese, is to act directly on one's most primal desires. As
such it is no coincidence that the sites he champions include not only those
promoting sexual titillation (Arashiyama Theater) and greed (Kurumazaki
Shrine) but also those accommodating even more oppressive desires: coer-
cion (Kosuge Prison), exploitation (the factory), and violence (the battle-
ship). Though he does escape essentialist, orientalist definitions of culture,
in their place Ango ends up positing unbridled assertions of primal desires
as near-perfect manifestations of the pure Japanese spirit.
This dimension is most evident in the hero Ango offers, Toyotomi Hide-
yoshi (1536-98). While a desire to undermine each and every one of Taut's
examples, including Hideyoshi, is part of the motivation, Ango's deifies this
man mainly due to the perfect fit between Ango's authentic spirit and the
legacy of this headstrong warrior. Describing the various building projects
Hideyoshi undertook, Ango writes:
All of them are the epitome of artifice;they are extravagantto the extreme.
As long as the work was carriedout along those lines, Hideyoshi was open
to any and all interpretations.When he was building a castle, he would
gatherthe biggest damnedbouldersin the realm ... Producingart and tak-
ing a shit were alike: both were endeavorsborn of the most vulgar inten-
tions. Still, the works have an undeniabledecisiveness about them. They
have a feeling of stability .... There is nothing of elegance or pleasurein
Hideyoshi's work. Each and every thing that he did was an expression of a
fanaticaldesire for things unparalleledin the realm. Thereis no evidence of
hesitation,no traceof even the slightestrestraint.He wantedall the beautiful
women in the realm, and, when denied, somebody would end up like Sen
no Rikyfi: dead. Hideyoshi was able to demand anything,even the impos-
sible. And he did.75
Though Ango does not explicitly note it here, it was precisely Hideyoshi's
"fanatical desire for things unparalleled in the realm" that prompted him to
attempt-not once but twice-to invade and colonize the Korean Penin-
sula. Neither Ango nor his readers could have failed to notice the parallel
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372 Journal of Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
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Dorsey: Sakaguchi Ango 373
ances like tradition (or ethics), is perfectly capable-in fact ideally suited
to-acts of aggression and violence.79 Waged partly in the name of cleans-
ing the spirit of distorting ideologies and intellectual mediation, Japan's
"holy war" was fueled by just such Japanese selves.
Denial of Self, Affirmation of Self: The Primal Japanese and the War
Ango's point is at many levels so appealing that the reader easily fails to
notice that he reifies, at a deeper level, a cultural nationalism as dangerous
as the one he appears to be sweeping away. This phenomenon can be seen
in the very critics who champion Ango as an oppositional voice. Takahashi
Haruo claims that in "Nihon bunka shikan" Ango "tramples" on the sacred
ground of cultural identity, making a "dangerous gamble" with both his
"subversive thought" (han ken'i teki shiso) and "critique of the wartime
romanticism of Japanese cultural identity." Still, two pages later Takahashi
writes: "Ango rejects the false images of things 'Japanese' and offers in
their place a vibrant, true image of Japan." 80The intoxicating sense of lib-
eration emanating from Ango's prose blinds Takahashi to the contradiction
inherent in speaking of a sweeping critique of cultural identity that produces
a "vibrant, true image of Japan."
The same contradiction can be seen in Okuno Takeo's reading of Ango.
As quoted above, Okuno speaks of Ango as a rational spirit striking a bold
blow against the wartime discourse on the Japanese spirit. Still, while read-
ing Ango as opposed to the ideology of cultural nationalism, Okuno simul-
taneously absorbs his theory of the Japanese as a pure, dynamic race unre-
strained by abstract thought.
79. Ango's writings often include celebrationsof such violence. See, for example, "Sa-
kurano mori no mankaino shita,"in SAZ,Vol. 3, pp. 352-68. On Ango's misogyny, see Steen,
"To Live and to Fall," pp. 171-210.
80. Takahashi," 'Nihon bunka shika' to 'Darakuron'no aida," pp. 305-6 and 308.
81. Okuno,SakaguchiAngo (1972), pp. 346-47. On Okuno'srole in establishingAngo's
legacy, see Steen, "To Live and to Fall," pp. 213-25.
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374 Journal of JapaneseStudies 27:2 (2001)
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Dorsey:SakaguchiAngo 375
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376 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
88. Nihon bungakuno rekishi,Vol. 12, p. 368; quotedin Jay Rubin, "FromWholesome-
ness to Decadence: The Censorshipof Literatureunder the Allied Occupation,"Journal of
Japanese Studies, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Winter 1985), p. 77.
89. SakaguchiAngo, "Darakuron,"in SAZ,Vol. 7, p. 197. This translationis fromRubin,
"FromWholesomeness to Decadence," p. 77. Interestingly,as soon as postwarJapanbegan
vilifying the kamikaze,Ango switched his stance and began praising them. The U.S. Occupa-
tion forces labeled his essay, "Tokk6taini sasagu" (An offering to the kamikaze,1947), "mili-
taristic,"and repressedit. It appearedin print for the firsttime in 2000. See SakaguchiAngo,
"Tokkotaini sasagu," in Vol. 16 of Sekii Mitsuo et al., eds., SakaguchiAngo zenshu (Tokyo:
Chikuma Shobo, 1998-2000), Vol. 16, pp. 740-43. I would like to thank Ogino Anna for
calling this essay to my attention.
90. See Mitchell, Censorshipin ImperialJapan, pp. 274-77.
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Dorsey: Sakaguchi Ango 377
Portraying the emperor as a pawn in the hands of more astute political play-
ers, and the entire imperial house as a random product fully interchangeable
with a host of alien authorities, was a shocking deviation from the homage
paid the emperor during the war. Though the targets have changed, Ango's
"Darakuron" is the same sort of wild rampage in the field of the sacred that
he had worked in his wartime essay.
A key word in Ango's "Nihon bunka shikan" had been "vulgarity"
(zokuaku), a concept Ango had recast to signify the spiritual authenticity
inherent in actions uncompromised by intellectual considerations. In the
postwar essay the very same concept is represented by the word "deca-
dence" (daraku) and the related "to fall" (ochiru). As Jay Rubin notes, this
was Ango's answer to the repressive ideologies of sacrifice and wholesome-
ness that were emphasized during the war.92Ango writes:
Man does not change. He just returnsto his humanstate. Manfalls. Faithful
retainersand saintly women fall. There is no way to avoid this, nor would
an avoidancesave man. Man lives, man falls. There is no convenientshort-
cut to salvation that exists outside of this. We do not fall because we have
lost the war. We fall because we are human; we fall because we are
alive.... Like man, Japan,too, must fall. It must redeem itself by falling to
the very depths and therefinding itself. Redemptionthroughpolitics is but
a surfacephenomenonand of no value at all.93
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378 Journalof Japanese Studies 27:2 (2001)
in many and paved the way for the many radicalchanges that were soon to
come. As Dower claims, the American occupationforces "set aboutdoing
what no other occupation force had done before: remaking the political,
social, cultural,and economic fabric of a defeatednation, andin the process
changingthe very way of thinkingof its populace."94This ambitious,wide-
ranging occupation agenda meant that without an acceptance,or ratheran
embrace, of their "fallen" state, the people and the nation were doomed
to continue the fight, though now on ideological ratherthan geographical
battlefields.Ango's vision allowed a tiredpopulationto avoid this battle.
Ango's message was comforting on a second level as well. His appeal
to a spiritualpurity distinguishedby its transcendenceof obsessions with
traditionalculture and national characterwas a familiar refrain.It echoed
his own wartime writing as well as the antinomicalrhetoricof other,more
nationalisticthinkers (including Nishitani Keiji with his "position of sub-
jective nothingness"). In this sense, Ango's wartime and postwar essays
provide a concrete example of an ideological trope that not only survived
both the war and its aftermath,but actuallyserved as an integralcomponent
of the revolutionarydimensionsof both.
Ango was slightly off the mark in the reason he provides for man'sin-
ability to fall completely, his inability to slip the chains of ideological
constructs.
Still,it is notpossibleformanto fall eternally,it is notpossibleforhimto
hitrockbottom.Thereason?Inthefaceof hardshipmancannotmaintaina
heartof steel.Manis pathetic,manis frail,andforthishe is laughable. But
he is justtoo weakto fallto theverybottom.95
In fact, the obstacle preventinga complete fall from ideological castles in
the air is not human weakness, as Ango would have us believe, but rather
the ubiquityof ideology. We cannot conceive of a "fall" withoutthe space
to fall through. Without recognizing and engaging that space, we are
doomed to plummet out of control, like Ango feeling the thrill of the fall
but able neitherto determinewhere we land nor to affect the space through
which we fall. Thoughhe escapes the moreexplicitly repressivedimensions
of the ideology of self and nation, these concepts themselves remainfully
intactin his work.
WhereAngo did get it right, though, was his qualificationof the radical
changes he was noting in "Darakuron":"People haven'tchanged,they've
always been like this. The times have changed.The world. Its outerskin."96
94. Dower, Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wakeof World War II (New York:W. W.
Norton and Co., 1999), p. 78.
95. Sakaguchi,"Darakuron,"p. 204.
96. Ibid., p. 197. Translationby Rubin, "FromWholesomeness to Decadence," p. 78.
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Dorsey: SakaguchiAngo 379
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