JOURNAL OF MASS COMMUNICATION STUDIES
Online ISSN : 2432-0838
Print ISSN : 1341-1306
ISSN-L : 1341-1306
Articles
Discussion on the Earthquake Presented by a “Post-earthquake School” Intellectual
Koki Mizuide
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2018 Volume 93 Pages 117-135

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Abstract

This study aims to clarify the transition of collective memory and recognition

about the Great Kanto Earthquake through the exploration of the narratives

of an academic figure. In a time when the collective memory of this past disaster

has been fading, this report made it clear how the opinion of the intellectual has

changed and why. The intellectual in question is Ikutaro Shimizu, who experienced

the Great Kanto Earthquake. Known as a prominent writer, he continued

to express his opinion on the Great Kanto Earthquake. He described himself an

“après un tremblement de terre”( post-earthquake) writer, playing on words of

the après guerre( post-war) generation. After the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake

and its aftermath, Shimizu’s opinion on the disaster has drawn public

attention again. The aim of this report is to trace the manner in which Shimizu

talked about the disaster and how it changed.

  Before the end of the Second World War, Shimizu rarely discussed the

Great Kanto Earthquake. In the days after the Second World War, he began to

write essays on the huge earthquake. In other words, he developed his own

interpretation of the earthquake in contrast with his war experience. As he recognized

that the Great Kanto Earthquake had been downplayed by society at

that time, he wrote about the Earthquake over and over as one of his important

personal experiences. Although he attempted to evoke collective remembrance

of the Earthquake in 1960, he quit writing about the Earthquake after all.

  It is in and after 1970 that his narrative seemed to change. He came to deal

with the Great Kanto Earthquake as a matter of society or the nation, not as an

unforgettable personal event. He modified his opinion on the Earthquake in line

with the collective memory shared with people of the same period. This report

examines Shimizu’s argument on the Earthquake and its changes, and points

out the connection between personal memories and collective memory.

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© 2018 Japan Society for Studies in Journalism and Mass Communication
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