The Japanese Eye

Beichman, Janine

The Japanese Eye And what it saw at the dawn of the modern era. by Janine Beichman The rabbit hutch theory of Japanese society, popularized by the media some years back, depicted the Japanese as...

...At the beginning of the 19th century it was already apparent to many Japanese politicians that the policy of seclusion instituted in the 17th century had to go...
...The frog in the well, ignorant of the great ocean, was an image he used again and again in his essays to characterize his own contemporaries who were happy in their narrow world...
...This biography can be seen, in part, as Keene's attempt to answer his own question: "What enabled Kazan to create this extraordinary work...
...Watanabe Kazan's life, from the early years of poverty to service as an advisor to his lord, and then on to a tragic end, is narrated against the background of the last years of the Tokugawa shogunate...
...Everyone, even sober Confucian scholars, seems to have treated him as an object of curiosity and a subject for jokes...
...and Kazan was an Edo intellectual, one of a group of strong individuals as brilliant, opinionated, and imaginative as any New York intellectual of our own time...
...He does not offer an outright answer, but in a sense, the entire book provides one...
...He believed that Japan needed to open to the world, not only for the sake of national defense but also for the sake of pure knowledge...
...And yet Japan, like any other nation or society, is now and always has been full of fascinating people of great individuality with nothing robotic about them...
...In recent years, Keene has produced three biographies of iconic figures...
...Keene discussses in vivid detail all Kazan's major paintings and political writings, but what haunt me most are two portraits...
...Kazan was one of those who saw the handwriting on the wall...
...Ideas could get someone in plenty of trouble, and Kazan's ideas turned out to be his misfortune...
...Much effort has gone into acquiring the illustrations, many of which seem to be in private hands in Japan...
...Edo was the intellectual center of Japan then, just as its modern incarnation (Tokyo) is now...
...Watanabe Kazan was a casualty of the times...
...by Janine Beichman The rabbit hutch theory of Japanese society, popularized by the media some years back, depicted the Japanese as a nation of economic robots, happy to live in identical tiny houses while they slaved away building the GNP Many Americans drew the conclusion that Japan's contemporary economic success was founded on a devaluation of the individual, and a corresponding over-willingness to make sacrifices for the greater good of a company and the nation...
...He hated being stared at, and wanted only to return to his country home as soon as possible...
...He has been doing so now for over 50 years through a steady stream of books on Japanese literature and culture, as well as through a plentitude of translations of classical and modern Japanese prose and poetry...
...Emperor Janine Beichman, professor of Japanese Literature at Daito Bunka University, Tokyo, is the author of Embracing the Firebird: Yosano Akiko and the Birth of the Female Voice in Modern Japanese Poetry of Japan: Meiji and His World, 18521912 depicted the Emperor Meiji against the backdrop of the history of the Meiji period and the modernization of Japanese culture...
...but instead he came to "appreciate," as Keene puts it, "the magnitude of European civilization...
...He was arrested on trumped-up char-ges, and ultimately placed under house arrest...
...Now comes his latest book...
...One was of the giant Ozora Buzaemon, who was over seven feet tall...
...To support himself, he continued to paint and sell pictures, a crime when under house arrest...
...Perhaps the book will inspire a major exhibition of Kazan's work, one that will travel abroad as freely as Kazan would have wished...
...Surely, in this portrait, the two animating passions of Kazan's life—his Confucianism and his art— came together to inspire him, so that the realism at which he excelled was infused with something greater than itself...
...This is the first full-length biography in English of an important samurai intellectual whose accomplishments as painter and statesman still reverberate in modern Japan...
...The second portrait is that of Kazan's revered teacher of Confucian studies, Sato Issai...
...A timid giant, Buzaemon was taken to visit various prestigious people in Edo in the company of his master, the daimyo of Kumamoto...
...In his discussion of this portrait, Keene confesses that he can not account for its dramatic intensity, or the vivid evocation of personality, which are what make it so unforgettable...
...but unlike Buzaemon's portrait, it was not made with a camera obscura...
...In any case, in reading Frog in the Well, one acquires a sense of what it was like to be alive in those strange and turbulent days of the waning of the Tokugawa shogunate, and a sense of commonality with one of its most sympathetic figures...
...It was, as Keene says, a "turbulent life and tragic death...
...This criticism seems to miss the sadness in Buzaemon's face," counters Keene...
...Although Kazan had some familiarity with Western techinques of shading and coloring, Keene argues persuasively that neither these nor anything in earlier Japanese portraiture could have directly inspired him in this portrait, which was "totally unlike any previous portrait made by a Japanese, a work that seems to have sprung into the world without parentage...
...It would be surprising if Kazan did not feel this...
...This is not the portrait of a 'freak' but of a man doomed to lead a tragic life...
...When it seemed that this might become known, and the repur-cussions extend to the lord of his domain, he committed suicide...
...This is a portrait of one individual at a tipping point in history as Japan moved at a snail's pace from a policy of minimal contact with the outside world to the opening of its doors to foreign relations...
...Yoshimasa and the Silver Pavillion described the creation of what we now think of as traditional Japanese aesthetics through the life of the medieval Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa...
...In spite of his ability to appreciate modern European knowledge, he retained to the very end a staunch loyalty to the Confucian values of his class...
...Although Keene does not find it one of Kazan's most appealing works, he defends it against a Japanese scholar who wrote a detailed study claiming that it was "no more than a representation of a freak...
...Donald Keene, Shincho Professor of Japanese Literature Emeritus, and University Professor Emeritus, at Columbia, excels in finding such people and making them come alive for us...
...Like the portrait of Buzaemon, it was realistic...
...Kazan's portrait of Buzaemon was made with a camera obscura, in order to capture his likeness as accurately as possible...
...Of course, the crucial difference was that Edo intellectuals were quite literally taking their life in their hands if they so much as murmured against shogu-nal policy...
...Steeped in the Confucian classics, like others of his class, Kazan had every reason to become a staunch opponent of Western learning...

Vol. 12 • September 2006 • No. 2


 
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