Storm of Progress: The Politics and Literature Debate and the Art of Nakamura Hiroshi

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March 31, 2026

Storm of Progress: The Politics and Literature Debate and the Art of Nakamura Hiroshi
Storm of Progress: The Politics and Literature Debate and the Art of Nakamura Hiroshi

Volume 24

Abstract: This paper discusses the work of Japanese painter Nakamura Hiroshi in the late 1950s and early 1960s in light of the politics and literature debate raging among the Japanese intelligentsia in the immediate post-World War II era, focusing specifically on the exchange between Kurahara Korehito and the writers associated with the Kindai bungaku literary journal. A key issue in these debates was that of subjectivity, and this article argues that analyzing Nakamura’s paintings with a focus on this concept reveals how the development of his work was dialectically mediated through the tumultuous political upheavals of the postwar era.

Keywords: Nakamura Hiroshi, Politics and Literature Debate, Postwar Japan, Political Art, Subjectivity

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Volume 24

About the author:

Sophia Lewis is a research student in the Graduate School of Letters at Kyoto University. Her proposed dissertation will explore the global emergence of the novel form through Meiji-era Japanese writers’ encounters with Russian literature. Her research interests also include literary theory, political economy, and German idealism.

Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus is a peer-reviewed publication, providing critical analysis of the forces shaping the Asia-Pacific and the world.

    About the author:

    Sophia Lewis is a research student in the Graduate School of Letters at Kyoto University. Her proposed dissertation will explore the global emergence of the novel form through Meiji-era Japanese writers’ encounters with Russian literature. Her research interests also include literary theory, political economy, and German idealism.