Tane maku Hito


Tane maku Hito was a Japanese proletarian literary magazine in the early 1920s.

Overview

Tane maku Hito was a Japanese proletarian literary magazine published in Akita Prefecture, and later Tokyo, between 1921 and 1923.

Background

Much left-leaning literature had been produced in Japan going back to the beginning of the century. With a few noted exceptions, however, these works tended to be, as Japanese literary historian and critic Donald Keene wrote, "immature and sentimental".
Tane maku Hitos founder, Ōmi Komaki, a young man from Tsuchizaki, studied in France as a teenager, and he spent World War I there. There, he was heavily influenced by the pacifist movement and, later, the left-leaning Clarté group led by Henri Barbusse, Anatole France and others. Komaki personally promised Barbusse that he would organize an equivalent movement when he returned to Japan.

Publication history

The first Tane maku Hito was founded by Komaki and his friends Yōbun Kaneko Kenzō Imano and others in Tsuchizaki in February 1921, and lasted for a scant three issues. Ōmi had recently returned to Japan having participated in Barbusse's anti-war movement. These writers were later joined by Takamaru Sasaki and Masatoshi Muramatsu, and the magazine was revived in Tokyo in October.
The magazine had an internationalist and anti-militarist outlook, and regularly published literary criticism that emphasized art and literary movements as aspects of the liberation movement.
It ceased publication in October 1923, due to government pressure following the Great Kantō Earthquake. Its final issue, as well as the supplement Tane-maki Ki, were heavily critical of the massacre of Koreans and socialists in the aftermath of the earthquake.
In total, 21 issues were published, of which four had been banned by government censors before the earthquake.

Contents

Each issue of Tane maku Hito included an "oath" that, in obscure language, expressed apparent support of the Russian Revolution.

Reception and legacy

Tane maku Hito is generally credited with launching the proletarian literature movement in Japan. Reprints of the magazine were published in 1961 and 1986.

Works cited

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