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VÖLKERPSYCHOLOGIE AND THE APPROPRIATION OF “SPIRIT” IN MEIJI JAPAN*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 September 2010
Abstract
Conceptions of Geist (mind/spirit) associated with German Romanticism shaped ideologies of national folk, not only in Europe but elsewhere in the world. In Meiji Japan (1868–1912) psychologists drew upon Volkerpsychologie (folk psychology) and Geist to create a narrative of Japanese folk mind/spirit. Here, spirit functioned as a “hidden essence” which substantiated the integrity of the folk, positioned the folk hierarchically in opposition to other societies, and explained (and presented correctives to) the fragmentation of Japanese society. Japanese psychologists, I argue, appropriated the narrative form of Geist discourse, retaining its ideological power even as they altered its substance by divesting German psychology of its orientalist and Christian content. Attention to Japan's engagement with nineteenth-century German psychology will contribute to a more thorough account of the production of “spirit” in Meiji Japan and to a critique of present-day exclusionary ideologies of Japanese spirit and identity.
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References
1 See, for example, Vlastos, S., Mirror of Modernity: Invented Traditions of Modern Japan (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1998)Google Scholar; Najita, T. and Harootunian, H. D., “Japan's Revolt against the West,” in Wakabayashi, B., ed., Modern Japanese Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 207–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2 Though prevalent terms in Japan's discourse on spirit such as seishin (roughly “spirit,” “mind”) or tamashii (“spirit,” “soul”) have a long history, they come to be invested with new meanings during the Meiji period. Thus, for example, it became possible to approach seishin psychologically as the individual mind, but also culturally as the social mind, social consciousness, or collective spirit/soul of a people.
3 Here I am drawing upon and paraphrasing W. C. Dowling's helpful conception of a “hidden essence that may be invoked to explain a world of changing appearances otherwise unintelligible in their variety and apparent randomness.” While Dowling calls this “theological power,” I refer to this operation more broadly as the power of ideology. See Dowling, W. C., Jameson, Althuser, Marx: An Introduction to the Political Unconscious (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1984), 48Google Scholar.
4 Thus, following F. Jameson and L. Hjelmslev, we may speak of two contents: the content as the substance of the ideological narrative that relates the story of the German Volk or the Japanese minzoku (folk) and their respective “national characters” etc. and the equally ideological content of the narrative form itself (involving a subject unfolding through history toward “narrative closure” or a telos). On content and form, “master narratives,” and “narrative closure” see Jameson, F., The Political Unconscious: Narrative as a Socially Symbolic Act (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1981), 99, 147, 28–9Google Scholar. Also see Hjelmslev, L., Prolegomena to a Theory of Language, trans. Whitfield, F. J. (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1961), 47–60Google Scholar.
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12 In recent years, various studies of history and theory have employed the idea of “mapping” an intellectual terrain. In formulating my views on the mapping of “spirit,” I have found the following helpful: Wigen, K., The Making of a Japanese Periphery, 1750–1920 (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1995), 3Google Scholar; Thomas, J. A., Reconfiguring Modernity: Concepts of Nature in Japanese Political Ideology (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2001), 35–8Google Scholar; and Yonemoto, M., Mapping Early Modern Japan: Space, Place, and Culture in the Tokugawa Period (1603–1868) (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2003), passimGoogle Scholar.
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14 Despite the ongoing effort to assert the racial, cultural, aesthetic, or moral unity of the Japanese people, the Japanese were not, and are not today, a homogeneous group. For a discussion of Japan's heterogeneity see Weiner, M., Japan's Minorities: The Illusion of Homogeneity (New York: Routledge, 1997)Google Scholar.
15 Ômichi Waichi, for example, pointed out that some scholars speak of kokumin no seishin or Yamato-damashii, others refer to minzoku-shin or Yamato-shin. All of these, he (problematically) explained, are simply aspects of the social mind. Ômichi, Shakai shinrigaku, 4.
16 Tokutani, Shakai shinrigaku, 6, 13.
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24 Quoted in Spence, J., The Chan's Great Continent: China in Western Minds (New York: Norton, 1999), 99Google Scholar.
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26 Hegel, Vorlesungen über die Philosophie der Geschichte (Berlin: Verlag von Dunder und Humblot, 1848), 415.
27 See Lowell, P., The Soul of the Far East (Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1888)Google Scholar; and Rikizô, Nakashima, “Mr. Percival Lowell's Misconception of the Character of the Japanese,” New Englander and Yale Review 14/2, New Series (Feb. 1889), 97–102Google Scholar.
28 Lazarus, M., “Über das Verhältnis des Einzelnen zur Gesammtheit,” Zeitschrift für Völkerpsychologie und Sprachwissenschaft 2 (1862), 421Google Scholar. For this translation I am indebted to D. J. Rosenberg, who cites this quotation in both English and German. See Rosenberg, “Patho-Teleology and the Spirit of War: The Psychoanalytic Inheritance of National Psychology,” Monatshefte 100/2 (2008), 215, 224, n. 13.
29 Lazarus and Steinthal, “Einleitende Gedanken über Völkerpsychologie,” Zeitschrift für Völkerpsychologie und Sprachwissenschaft 1 (1860), 7. This translation appears in Rosenberg, “Patho-Teleology and the Spirit of War,” 214, 223, n. 10. Note that here, at least, the “Orient” is not the backdrop against which notions of German spirit are formed, reinforcing the above point for a more nuanced approach to orientalism than provided by Said.
30 Takayama Chogyû, for example, explaining the thought of Herder, quoted a section from Richard Falckenberg's 1885 “History of Modern Philosophy,” but his citation stops just before Falckenberg's summary of Herder on human development: “As nature forms a single great organism, and from the stone to man describes a connected development, so humanity is one great individual which passes through its several ages.” The Orient, in this statement, represented the stage of humanity's infancy. Falckenberg, R., History of Modern Philosophy from Nicolas Cusa to the Present Time (New York: H. Holt and Co., 1893), 311Google Scholar.
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32 Herder does not use the term Volksgeist. He does use Geist des Volkes, Geist der Nation, Nationalgeist, Genius des Volkes, and Nationalcharakter. See Rotenstreich, N., “Volksgeist,” in The Dictionary of the History of Ideas (Charlottesville: Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library, 2003), 3Google Scholar.
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35 See Le Bon, Kokumin shinrigaku, 9–10.
36 Le Bon, Psychology of Peoples, 27–8.
37 Le Bon, Minzoku hatten no shinri, 34. Maeda chose not to insert the Japanese into the “superior” category. They are simply not mentioned.
38 Le Bon, Psychology of Peoples, 84.
39 Le Bon, Psychology of Peoples, 81, 85; cf. idem, Minzoku hatten no shinri, 83, 86.
40 Stefan Tanaka addresses this strategy from the standpoint of oriental history (tôyôshi). See Tanaka, S., Japan's Orient: Rendering Pasts into History (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993)Google Scholar.
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51 See Michio, Nagazawa, Taishô jidai (Tokyo: Kôjinsha, 2005), 42–9Google Scholar; Gluck, Japan's Modern Myths, 175.
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54 M. Lazarus, “Über das Verhältnis des Einzelnen zur Gesammtheit,” 423. Cited in Rosenberg, “Patho-Teleology and the Spirit of War,” 215, 224, n. 11.
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60 Important in the dissemination of Herbart's pedagogical thought were of course Herbart's own works, but perhaps even more important were those by his disciple Lindner. Translations of Lindner's pedagogical works include: Nagao, Ariga, trans., Rin-shi kyôjugaku (Tokyo: Bokuya, 1888)Google Scholar; Motoichi, Yuhara, trans., Rin-shi kyôikugaku (Tokyo: Kinkôdô, 1893)Google Scholar; Suematsu, Inagaki, trans., Rin-shi futsû kyôikugaku (Tokyo: Tohôdo, 1893)Google Scholar; and Motoichi, Yuhara, trans., Rin-shi kyôikugaku kyôkasho (Tokyo: Kinkôdô, 1901)Google Scholar.
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63 Ufer, Introduction to the Pedagogy of Herbart, 97, 100.
64 Lincicome, Principle, Praxis, and the Politics of Educational Reform, 201.
65 Ufer, Introduction to the Pedagogy of Herbart, 101.
66 Tokutani Toyonosuke, for one, asserted that the social mind itself possessed volition just as the individual mind did. See Tokutani, Shakai shinrigaku, 13–14.
67 Ibid., 13.
68 Ufer, Introduction to the Pedagogy of Herbart, 104.
69 Hegel, Philosophy of History, 457, translator's emphases. Cf. the Japanese version: Hegel, Rekishi kenkyûhô, trans. Shibue Tamotsu (Tokyo: Kôbunkan, 1894), 199.
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72 Kiyoko, Takeda, Ningen-kan no sôkoku: Kindai Nihon no shisô to kirisutokyô (Tokyo: Kôbundo, 1967), 246Google Scholar.
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75 Lindner, Rin-shi Kyôikugaku, “Seven Points on Translation,” 2.
76 Takeda, Ningen-kan no sôkoku, 246.
77 For additional background on this incident see Thelle, Notto R., Buddhism and Christianity in Japan: From Conflict to Dialogue, 1854–1899 (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1987)Google Scholar.
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82 Jahoda, J. F. Herbart, 23, 28.
83 K. Doak discusses this issue as well. See his “Nationalism as Dialectics,” in Heisig, J. W. and Maraldo, J. C., eds., Rude Awakenings: Zen, the Kyoto School, and the Question of Nationalism (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1995), 174–96Google Scholar. Inoue Tetsujirô referred to the Imperial Rescript as the “sacred book of Meiji.” See Inoue, Kokumin dôtokuron gairon (Tokyo: Sanseidô, 1912), 12.
84 The particular forms in which assertions of folk mind appeared—imperial proclamations, academic treatises in social psychology, scientific journals, textbooks for use in teachers’ colleges—also carried their own ideological content and helped to legitimize spirit.
85 Lively, Joseph de Maistre, 109. Kuga, “Shuken genron,” 244.
86 See, for example, Kanji, Nishio, Kokumin no rekishi (Tokyo: Sankei shinbun nyûsu sâbisu, 1999)Google Scholar; and Masao, Hamabayashi, ed., Tettei hihan “Kokumin dôtoku” (Tokyo: Ôtsuki shoten, 2001)Google Scholar.
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