Minzoku-ha (民族派, lit. "ethnic nationalist groups"[1][2]) or New Right (新右翼, shin-uyoku)[3] is a Japanese ethno-nationalist faction that emerged after postwar Japan.
Content
editMinzoku-ha are known to be "anti-American" (反米保守, lit. "anti-American conservative") than mainstream conservatives or Japanese nationalists. It originated among the student agitations of the 1960s and 1970s, many of whom were followers of Yukio Mishima.
In postwar Japan, mainstream conservatives prioritized "anti-communism" (反共主義) over Japanese "ethnic nationalism" (民族主義) in the context of the Cold War; however, minzoku-ha was critical of the pro-Americanism of mainstream conservatives. Minzoku-ha grew up influenced by Yukio Mishima's nationalism and the Japanese New Left.[4][5]
Minzoku-ha groups
edit- Daitō juku (大東塾)
- Ichisuikai (一水会)
- Tatenokai
Activists
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ 民族派を英語で Eijirō. "民族派: ethnic nationalist (groups)"
- ^ Decentralization – Social Science Japan Newsletter. Newsletter of the lnstitute of Social Science, University of Tokyo. "... ethnic nationalist groups (minzoku-ha) and the “new" right (shin-uyoku) take a more intellectual and philosophical approach to their activism." on September 2007. ISSN 1340-7155
- ^ Stefan Fuchs (5 December 2018). Japanese 'Right-wing Rock'? A Lyrics Content Analysis. "In response to the protest movement against the US-Japan Security Treaty, which was carried out predominantly by left-wing student associations, in the early 1960s Japan saw the arrival of an academic far-right movement that followers refer to as Minzoku-ha 民族派 (ethnic faction) but is usually known to the general public by the name Shin-uyoku 新右翼 (The New Right), a label coined by the Japanese mass media as an equivalent to the so-called Shin-sayoku 新左翼 (The New Left).". p. 81.
- ^ 千坂恭二 (2015), "思想としてのファシズム" 彩流社
- ^ 日高義樹 (2014), "オバマの敗北、プーチンの勝利". Voice. p. 95