Inner Worlds
Interiority and Capitalist Modernity in Japan
Richard M. Reitan(Author)
The University of Michigan Press
Will be published approx. on 16. September 2026
Book
Hardback
312 pages
978-0-472-07824-0 (ISBN)
Description
Inner Worlds examines the emergence and operation of representations of interiority-consciousness, "folk mind," "spirit"-in Japan from its industrial revolution to the rise of fascism during the interwar period. These representations functioned to reproduce the capitalist system by containing its excesses. Thus, poverty in the 1880s was ostensibly the result of defects in one's innate mental character. A degenerate "crowd mind" explained the strikes and riots of the early twentieth century. State subversion during the 1930s supposedly reflected an attenuated "folk spirit." By locating the roots of capitalism's excesses not within the socioeconomic order itself but within a defective interiority, ideologies of interiority operated to contain disruptions to Japan's socioeconomic order, conceal its defects, and sustain the capitalist system. Inner Worlds reveals how interiority was constituted in ways consistent with both the demands of the emerging capitalist order of the late nineteenth century and the conditions that coalesced to form a fascist conjecture in the 1930s.
Reviews / Votes
"Inner Worlds makes a very important and timely intervention in the fields of Japanese history, intellectual history, and political history. Reitan situates the idea of 'interiority' within the historical-material conditions in which it emerged and explains how its conceptual transformations were entwined with the changing sociopolitical situation of prewar Japan." -- Max Ward, Middlebury College "Reitan's Inner Worlds convincingly critiques the epistemological foundations of liberal and fascist ideology in modern Japan by analyzing a vast discourse on interiority (naikai) produced during the Meiji period (1868-1912). This discourse disavowed historical-materialist critiques of capitalism's excesses by representing the anxieties and anger of the impoverished masses with social, ahistorical, and aestheticized ideas of individual survival and national belonging. To understand liberal and fascist ideology in Japan-past and present-Inner Worlds is a must read." -- Ken Kawashima, University of TorontoMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
United States
Illustrations
2 illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-472-07824-0 (9780472078240)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Richard M Reitan is Professor of History at Franklin & Marshall College.
Content
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Retreat from the Social
Chapter One: The Structure of Interiority and Capitalist Modernity in Early Meiji Japan
Chapter Two: Progress and Degeneration: Mind, Body and Social Reproduction
Chapter Three: Aesthetic Interiority and the Folk Mind in Late Meiji Japan
Chapter Four: The Adversary of Spirit: The Crowd Mind and the Pathologization of Dissent
Chapter Five: Culture as Inner World: Vitalistic Interiority, Aesthetic Community and Fascism
Chapter Six: Relational Consciousness, Porous Bodies
Epilogue: Aestheticized Interiority's Utopian Appeal
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Retreat from the Social
Chapter One: The Structure of Interiority and Capitalist Modernity in Early Meiji Japan
Chapter Two: Progress and Degeneration: Mind, Body and Social Reproduction
Chapter Three: Aesthetic Interiority and the Folk Mind in Late Meiji Japan
Chapter Four: The Adversary of Spirit: The Crowd Mind and the Pathologization of Dissent
Chapter Five: Culture as Inner World: Vitalistic Interiority, Aesthetic Community and Fascism
Chapter Six: Relational Consciousness, Porous Bodies
Epilogue: Aestheticized Interiority's Utopian Appeal
Bibliography