It’s fair to say that I was troubled a couple of weeks back at some of the fanfic written about new Prime Minister Suga Yoshihide here on Twitter, noting him to be a hardscrabble fighter for reform. This story should trouble everyone in academia. www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/ne…
The Science Council of Japan is one of the more laudable institutions in the country’s government, by law including hundreds of appointed specialists from across disciplines to provide guidance and expert opinion to the government on important matters of the day.
Needless to say, the government is free to ignore its suggestions, but institutionalizing the provision of expertise from researchers is at least one way to ensure that policy-relevant knowledge based on research gets a public hearing. It’s a good thing. scj.go.jp
In an apparently unprecedented move, Prime MInister Suga seems to have directed six nominees to be excluded from the Council, all of them specialists in the humanities or social sciences, apparently because of their criticism of the Abe administration’s security policies.
I take this deeply personally, because one of the excluded scholars is my friend Uno Shigeki, a political theorist at the University of Tokyo’s Institute of Social Science. And I can think of few scholars as brilliant, decent, thoughtful, and temperate as Professor Uno.
Professor is hardly a bomb-throwing radical. He’s a theorist of democracy who focuses largely on civil society and its role in supporting democratic institutions, building from Tocqueville, Mill, and other writers on community. Here’s his statement: tokyo-np.co.jp/article/59264
Obviously Professor Uno’s career isn’t threatened by this. While not a household name — he doesn’t seek the limelight and isn’t a regular fixture of TV — he’s a widely respected, tenured scholar at Japan’s most prestigious university.
But what worries me is what this potentially signals about Suga. I’ve been trying to figure it out. Is it just personal vindictiveness? That’d be bad enough, but Suga seems too crafty for that. Is he threatened by these scholars? Maybe, but doubtful.
What would worry me is if he were to be trying to take a page from the right-wing populist playbook and to make an enemy of academic experts with the temerity to criticize government behavior. I’m not sure that’s his goal, but I’m coming up short on other options.
Just to say that the next time I hear from an academic colleague about how Suga’s bravely reforming the economy, or showing commitment to the US-Japan alliance, or how he’s a self-made man who toughed it out from his days at a cardboard factory, I’m going to remind you of this.
And I’m going to ask why any scholar should offer support to a prime minister who has — apparently on something of a whim, and on a matter of no obvious strategic necessity — decided to take a visible baseball bat to academic independence and integrity.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Thread So you want to do research in Japan and need a sponsor. Some thoughts. 1/38
Like most researchers in Japan, I'm delighted both for more interest in the field and for researchers and grad students to want to invest the time here to get to know the place, the archives, the people, the language, the politics, whatever. 2/38
Like many others, I am happy to try to host you, particularly because I think Waseda is a great place for international scholars and students. So I'm happy if you get in touch! But I'll be even happier if you think through how best to approach the request. 3/38
2020 can just go to hell at this point. I had no idea he was ill. He was an amazing screen presence and I’m so sorry for his family and friends, as well as for film fans who won’t get the chance to see what he’d do next.
I’m in a museum while my daughter is napping in her stroller, and I’m just losing all emotional control at this point. I mean, I call 2020 a hellscape mostly as a joke, and yet I hear this unending drumbeat of tragedy and dread back in the US that echoes for me here in Tokyo.
Like the things that had given hope are being systematically destroyed, replaced by a miasma of teenaged militia members with AR-15s, a “well, at least the right people are dying” approach to a pandemic, and a celebration of conspiracy fantasies as our new governing philosophy.
I'm friendly with and have great admiration for a number of the signatories, and I don't disagree with anything they've written. But honestly, this well-meaning, very well-reasoned, and convincing letter feels like it was written in a very different era.
I don't mean their security views are outdated -- though I guess that would be one possible critique -- but rather that the idea of coherent foreign policy as a selling point of a campaign feels like a relic from a bygone era.
If anything, I would think that the Trump era could encourage us to wonder whether the public emphasis on strategy, rationality, and values in foreign policy has ever been anything more than a solipsistic preference for expertise that obscures domination, cruelty, and racism.
Here's a multi-page rundown of the 75th anniversary of the end of the war at Yasukuni Shrine from Japan's most right-leaning national newspaper, the Sankei Shimbun: sankei.com/life/news/2008…
I'm obviously not a Sankei partisan nor an apologist for Yasukuni. What does interest me is the representational gap between discussions of the shrine internationally and this kind of coverage domestically.
What stands out in these pages is less the chauvinistic nationalism of many of the shrine's most vocal champions and the advocacy for a more muscular foreign policy by its key political allies, and more the sentimentalization of violence and sacrifice.
Thread: My reaction to the newest Doraemon film, "Nobita's New Dinosaur" (伸びたの新恐竜), a meditation on biopower and neoliberal governmentality, memory and narrative, and the sublime power of friendship. Spoiler alert! 1/25
Now celebrating its 50th anniversary, the Doraemon series -- about a robot cat sent by its owner in the future to his nerdy childhood self, armed with a pocket of futuristic gadgets to help him out of wacky misadventures -- has long been noted for its Foucauldian overtones. 2/25
Indeed, the titular new dinosaur-- which was released last Friday, after a #COVID19-related delay from its planned March debut -- is a direct reference to the 2006 film "Nobita's Dinosaur," which made its most pointed reference to Foucault's work. 3/25