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"The source field recording is combined with found sounds and field recordings made at a 1965 Hiroshima anti-nuclear protest, a 1968 Tokyo student protest, as well as street performances and 'happenings' presented between 1960 and 1970. "Tobata, an industrial port in southern Japan, was often the site of such demonstrations and protests, many of which were related to the Anpo struggle (安保闘争, Anpo tōsō). "One of the most infamous moments of the Anpo struggle was the 'Hagerty Incident', in which U.S. Ambassador to Japan Douglas MacArthur II (the nephew of the famous general) deliberately provoked an international incident by ordering his car to be driven into a large crowd of protesters. The provocation backfired and chaos ensued. "The right of people to gather and protest, celebrate, or commemorate is a fundamental right with cultural, political, and social significance. The sounds we create in doing so are an essential part of our sonic heritage." Tobata lantern festival reimagined by Simon Kennedy. IMAGE: JKT-c, CC BY 3.0 , via Wikimedia Commons ——————— This sound is part of the Sonic Heritage project, exploring the sounds of the world's most famous sights. Find out more and explore the whole project: https://www.citiesandmemory.com/heritage
Hablamos con Federico Luis Moya es el presidente de ANPO, la Asociación Nacional de Personas que viven con Obesidad, por el Día Mundial de la Obesidad.
Today on Table Talk with BBYOInsider, we are LIVE from International Convention 2025 with a special guest—Lani Anpo! Lani is an inspiring Native American leader and advocate, making a significant impact in her community while staying true to her cultural roots. Stay tuned as we dive into her journey, the challenges she faced, and what it means to represent her heritage on the global stage at IC 2025.
This week on the Revised Introduction to Japanese History: the Occupation comes to an end, but what happens next? This week is all about the 1950s, when clashing visions of Japan's future would culminate in one of the largest protests in the nation's history, laying the groundwork for the political world that has existed ever since. Show notes here.
Acompaña a Sari y a sus amigos a adentrarse un poco en uno de los símbolos de protesta de Japón durante la posguerra: la canción Sukiyaki de Kyo Sakamoto y que más tarde sería reinterpretada por Selena. Después del 14 de agosto de 1945 en Japón el emperador Hirohito declara la rendición incondicional de su nación y con ello comenzó la Victoria sobre Japón o el día V-J. El cual marca el inicio de una larga ocupación de los aliados en tierras japonesas y que acarreará mucho dolor para la población nipona. Esto más tarde generará una serie de protestas conocidas como las Protestas Anpo. Una buena fortuna está detrás de las nubes La buena fortuna está en el cielo Por ello, miro arriba y miro hacia adelante.¡Escucha nuestro podcast exclusivo sobre el asesinato de Trotsky en Podimo! Aquí nuestra landing page: https://go.podimo.com/latam/historiachiquita Support the show
Alex Finn Marcartney joins Kota to talk about the history of the anti-Vietnam War movement in Japan and the legacy of the Red Army Faction or the Sekigun-ha, the mother organization of the Japanese Red Army and the United Red Army we previously discussed in this podcast. In this episode, we discuss...1) Japan's role in the Vietnam War and the significance of Okinawa as a “keystone” for the US-Japanese imperialism in the Cold War as 2022 marks the 50th year since its so-called “reversion” from the US to Japan. 2) Some of the watershed events in the Japanese Long Sixties such as a student protest at Haneda Airport to prevent Prime Minister Sato Eisaku's visit to the US, and how these events radicalized the anti-Vietnam War movement from a citizens-led pacifist anti-war movement to a students and workers-led militant anti-imperialist movement, although the distinction between these two forms of struggle was not clear cut. 3) The meaning of and the discourse surrounding the Yodogo Incident where a group of young militants from the Sekigun-ha hijacked a plane and went to the DPRK, and ask whether the event was simply a farce or a productive lesson for revolutionary movements. 4) The emergence of the Sekigun-ha within the context of the broader mass opposition to the Vietnam War. We specifically highlight its theories of the World Proletarian Revolutionary War and the International Base Area, as well as how it conceptualized political violence. Throughout our discussion of the Yodogo Group and the Sekigun-ha, we highlight the importance of understanding the theory and ideology of these revolutionary organizations as they are, before criticizing and passing judgment on them, while the mainstream media do just that by pathologizing them along gendered and racialized lines. 5) How the Sekigun-ha in Japan and the Red Army Faction in West Germany influenced each other, and how these two societies' relationship with US imperialism through NATO and ANPO aided the parallel existence and solidarity between these two organizations.6) What the history of the Red Armies and the militant Global Sixties tell us about the National Question and internationalism.Intro: Cielo by Huma-Huma Outro: Enter the Mirror by Les Rallizes DénudésDonate on GoGetFunding. Support the show
Nobusuke Kishi, 13 november 1896 – 7 augusti 1987 - var en japansk byråkrat och politiker som var Japans premiärminister från 1957 till 1960. Han är morfar till Shinzō Abe, Japans premiärminister mellan 2006 till 2007 och 2012 till 2020 - mördad idag 2022-07-08. Kishi blev känd för sitt exploaterande styre av den japanska marionettstaten Manchukuo i nordöstra Kina på 1930-talet, där Kishi förtjänade sig smeknamnet "Monstret från Shōwa-eran". Kishi tjänstgjorde senare i premiärminister Hideki Tōjōs krigstidskabinett som handelsminister och viceminister för ammunition, och undertecknade krigsförklaringen mot USA den 7 december 1941. Efter andra världskriget satt Kishi fängslad i tre år som misstänkt klass A krigsförbrytare. Den amerikanska regeringen dömde honom dock inte och släppte honom så småningom eftersom de ansåg Kishi vara den bästa mannen att leda efterkrigs-Japan i en pro-amerikansk riktning. Med amerikanskt stöd fortsatte han med att konsolidera det japanska konservativa lägret mot upplevda hot från Japans socialistparti på 1950-talet. Kishi var avgörande för bildandet av det mäktiga liberala demokratiska partiet (LDP) genom en sammanslagning av mindre konservativa partier 1955, och anses därför ha varit en nyckelspelare i initieringen av "1955-systemet", den förlängda perioden under vilken LDP var det överväldigande dominerande politiska partiet i Japan. Som premiärminister ledde Kishis felaktiga hantering av 1960 års översyn av säkerhetsavtalet mellan USA och Japan till de massiva Anpo-protesterna 1960, som var de största protesterna i Japans moderna historia och som tvingade honom att avgå i skam. Nu får vi se om döda män talar eller ej... #CarlNorberg #DeFria https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobusuke_Kishi De Fria är en folkrörelse som jobbar för demokrati genom en upplyst och medveten befolkning! Stöd oss: SWISH: 070 - 621 19 92 (mottagare Sofia S) PATREON: https://patreon.com/defria_se HEMSIDA: https://defria.se FACEBOOK: https://facebook.com/defria.se
This week: how did a spate of right wing violence in the early years of the 1960s help to fundamentally reshape public discourse around the emperor (and thus around politics and history more generally) up to the present day? And what does all of this have to do with one of the most bizarre short stories that has ever been published? Show notes here.
Japan entered the 1960s on a bad note. The ANPO protests, the resignation of Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi and finally the assassination of Inejiro Asanuma. However Japan would make a complete turn around by the mid 60s becoming one of the most successful nations in the world. This episode covers the legacy of Nobusuke Kishi and Japan's transformation into the Japan we know today.Topics coveredAssassination of Inejiro AsanumaSuicide of Otoya YamaguchiHayato Ikeda Rises to the CallJapan Becomes an Economic PowerhouseThe Turbulence of '68The Legacy of Nobusuke KishiSupport the show
This week: why did the Japanese Socialist Party and the left more generally utterly fail to capitalize on the momentum of the largest protest in Japanese history? We'll cover everything from party infighting to....well, spoilers, it's mostly party infighting. Show notes here.
This lecture will begin with a look at the political turmoil and unrest in Japan during the 1950s and 1960s that were resolved—or at least sublimated—by the 1970 paradigm. The early 1970s, just as this paradigm was taking root, witnessed major political and economic crises, the so-called “Nixon shocks” and oil shocks, which together formed a major turning point for postwar Japan. We will finish up by examining the bubble of the late 1980s and the crisis of national confidence that followed it in the 1995.
Hablar del periodo SHOWA (1926 - 1989) es contradictorio, catastrófico, turbulento y, a pesar de todo, revitalizante. El Japón Imperial y el Japón posguerra se entrecruzan en una guerra recontada como un accidente del que se salió milagrosamente. A partir de ahí se idealizó la democracia y la paz en medio de una ocupación estadounidense que, con la Constitución del 47 y los Tratados de Paz y seguridad, se intensificó hasta detonar el radicalismo rural y la disidencia en un periodo marcado por la rápida modernización y el crecimiento económico. Apóyanos en Patreon: www.patreon.com/japoneschido Hazte parte de JAPÓN ES CHIDO y ayúdanos a seguir llevar el migajón del chisme a todas las sobremesas. Puedes acceder a material extra y echar chisme con nosotros en nuestro chat para responder a todas tus preguntas sobre esas cosas que no pueden ser sino japonesas. Síganos también en facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chismesamura... Agradecimiento perpetuo a la bandita PATREON que nos está apoyando hasta ahora: Susana del Rosario Leonel H. Momo Amadís R. Lu Albert' Monis Sofía Kameta Alejandro Japón es chido está disponible también en Spotify, Apple podcasts, y todas esas plataformas donde la chaviza escucha su pódcast de confianza. Comité del chisme samurai: Andrés (https://www.instagram.com/solo_andore...) Música original y producción de audio: Diego de la Vega (https://www.youtube.com/user/musiquep...) Ilustraciones, incluido nuestro samurai con sombrero-kabuto: José Lara (https://www.instagram.com/laralarawor...) Video (YouTube): 椿 (Tsubaki)
Oliver is joined by Nick Kapur, Associate Professor of History at Rutgers University, to discuss failed revolutions, drawing comparisons between the 1960 ANPO riots of Japan over US-Japan relations with the Capitol Hill Riot we saw on 6 January 2021. Although more than 60 years apart and in totally different contexts, Nick argues that there are several factors worthy of comparison, such as the role of polarising heads of state, the nationwide shocked response to televised political violence and how the media, state and people respond to these movements which never met their goals. Nick's research profile You can order Nick's book, Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo, here Image credits: [L] 1960 Protests against the United States-Japan Security Treaty by Asahi Shimbun Company [R] Proud Boy Demonstrator, May Day 2017 by AdamCohn Copyright © 2021 Oliver Moxham, ℗ 2021 Oliver Moxham. May be freely distributed in a classroom setting. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/beyond-japan/message
In this episode, Dr. Nick Kapur (Rutgers-Camden) places recent BLM marches into the context of Japan’s longer history of street protests and civil disobedience, highlighting the violent protests opposing the resigning of the controversial US-Japan Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security, or Anpo Treaty, in 1960.
Today your Benevolent and Righteous Hosts discuss the possibility of, and reasons for, Japanese Independence from American Hegemony (and how it might free us, too!) Support us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/logansrant
Nick Kapur’s Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo (Harvard University Press, 2018) is an ambitious look at the transformations of Japanese society after the massive protests against renewal of the US-Japan Security Treaty (abbreviated as “Anpo” in Japanese) in 1960. The treaty was renewed despite fifteen months of protest that involved 30 million people—1/3 of Japan’s population. The treaty, rammed through by the government of Kishi Nobusuke, but Kapur argues that the aftermath of this political paroxysm fundamentally changed Japan in complex and lasting ways. Kapur’s narrative begins with political changes both at home and in the US-Japan relationship, but the book addresses the economy, society, the labor movement literature, the arts, the mass media, the conservative establishment of the police and courts, and even the revitalization of right-wing forces like the yakuza. Kapur argues that the sometimes violent and ultimately failed protests against Anpo helped delegitimize extra-parliamentary protest and ushered in a turn toward the depoliticization of public society. Most provocatively, Kapur challenges the idea of the “1955 system” of one-party conservative rule under the Liberal Democratic Party, arguing instead that 1960 was the real landmark moment in the creation of a broader “Anpo system” that is the book’s subject. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Kapur’s Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo (Harvard University Press, 2018) is an ambitious look at the transformations of Japanese society after the massive protests against renewal of the US-Japan Security Treaty (abbreviated as “Anpo” in Japanese) in 1960. The treaty was renewed despite fifteen months... Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/japanese-studies
Nick Kapur’s Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo (Harvard University Press, 2018) is an ambitious look at the transformations of Japanese society after the massive protests against renewal of the US-Japan Security Treaty (abbreviated as “Anpo” in Japanese) in 1960. The treaty was renewed despite fifteen months... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Kapur’s Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo (Harvard University Press, 2018) is an ambitious look at the transformations of Japanese society after the massive protests against renewal of the US-Japan Security Treaty (abbreviated as “Anpo” in Japanese) in 1960. The treaty was renewed despite fifteen months of protest that involved 30 million people—1/3 of Japan’s population. The treaty, rammed through by the government of Kishi Nobusuke, but Kapur argues that the aftermath of this political paroxysm fundamentally changed Japan in complex and lasting ways. Kapur’s narrative begins with political changes both at home and in the US-Japan relationship, but the book addresses the economy, society, the labor movement literature, the arts, the mass media, the conservative establishment of the police and courts, and even the revitalization of right-wing forces like the yakuza. Kapur argues that the sometimes violent and ultimately failed protests against Anpo helped delegitimize extra-parliamentary protest and ushered in a turn toward the depoliticization of public society. Most provocatively, Kapur challenges the idea of the “1955 system” of one-party conservative rule under the Liberal Democratic Party, arguing instead that 1960 was the real landmark moment in the creation of a broader “Anpo system” that is the book’s subject. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Kapur’s Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo (Harvard University Press, 2018) is an ambitious look at the transformations of Japanese society after the massive protests against renewal of the US-Japan Security Treaty (abbreviated as “Anpo” in Japanese) in 1960. The treaty was renewed despite fifteen months of protest that involved 30 million people—1/3 of Japan’s population. The treaty, rammed through by the government of Kishi Nobusuke, but Kapur argues that the aftermath of this political paroxysm fundamentally changed Japan in complex and lasting ways. Kapur’s narrative begins with political changes both at home and in the US-Japan relationship, but the book addresses the economy, society, the labor movement literature, the arts, the mass media, the conservative establishment of the police and courts, and even the revitalization of right-wing forces like the yakuza. Kapur argues that the sometimes violent and ultimately failed protests against Anpo helped delegitimize extra-parliamentary protest and ushered in a turn toward the depoliticization of public society. Most provocatively, Kapur challenges the idea of the “1955 system” of one-party conservative rule under the Liberal Democratic Party, arguing instead that 1960 was the real landmark moment in the creation of a broader “Anpo system” that is the book’s subject. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Kapur’s Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo (Harvard University Press, 2018) is an ambitious look at the transformations of Japanese society after the massive protests against renewal of the US-Japan Security Treaty (abbreviated as “Anpo” in Japanese) in 1960. The treaty was renewed despite fifteen months of protest that involved 30 million people—1/3 of Japan’s population. The treaty, rammed through by the government of Kishi Nobusuke, but Kapur argues that the aftermath of this political paroxysm fundamentally changed Japan in complex and lasting ways. Kapur’s narrative begins with political changes both at home and in the US-Japan relationship, but the book addresses the economy, society, the labor movement literature, the arts, the mass media, the conservative establishment of the police and courts, and even the revitalization of right-wing forces like the yakuza. Kapur argues that the sometimes violent and ultimately failed protests against Anpo helped delegitimize extra-parliamentary protest and ushered in a turn toward the depoliticization of public society. Most provocatively, Kapur challenges the idea of the “1955 system” of one-party conservative rule under the Liberal Democratic Party, arguing instead that 1960 was the real landmark moment in the creation of a broader “Anpo system” that is the book’s subject. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, we look at the contentious summer of 1960, in which the disputes of postwar Japan boiled over into some of the most intense protests in the country's history. How do these conflicts shape modern Japanese society?
Cruel Story of Youth, the 1960 film from Nagisa Oshima, tells the tale of two teens against the backdrop of the ANPO protests. The film was at the forefront of the Japanese New Wave cinema movement.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Cruel Story of Youth, the 1960 film from Nagisa Oshima, tells the tale of two teens against the backdrop of the ANPO protests. The film was at the forefront of the Japanese New Wave cinema movement.
Are you ready to rumble? Join us on the island this week for legendary filmmaker Kinji Fukasaku's 60th and final film, Battle Royale.
#ryangarcia #Rukiyaanpo #jakepaul ️️️☎️Ryan Now Targeting Jake Paul