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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 May 2025
In this essay, Robert Stolz takes us back to the Meiji period to examine the ideas of an early environmental activist, Tanaka Shōzō. Stolz describes Tanaka as a “modern environmental thinker” whose theory of the relationship between “poison” and “flow” informed his Meiji-era activism against both the Ashio Cooper Mine's pollution of rivers and the Meiji state's designs for flood control on the Kantō plain. Tanaka's concern with humanity's relationship to nature should be read alongside the attitudes of his contemporaries discussed in the Blaxell and Fedman essays. In addition, Stolz's discussion of how Tanaka's ideas might be relevant to present-day controversies over dams enables a consideration of how state efforts to control nature have, and have not, changed over the course of the modern period.
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[2] “Kodoku chosa iinkai chosahokokusho” in Tochigi kenshi shiryohen genkindai 9 (Tokyo: Gyosei, 1980). 635-6.
[3] Kasenho 1896, Horei zensho, Okurasho insatsukyoku.
[4] Kodoku chosa, 992.
[5] Tanaka Shozo, Tanaka Shozo senshu 7 vol., ed. Anzai Kunio, Kano Masanao, Komatsu Hiroshi, Sakaya Junji and Yui Masaomi (Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1989). 4: 159.
[6] Tanaka (1989), 5: 333.
[7] Tanaka (1989), 4: 149-50.
[8] Tanaka (1989), 4: 137-8.
[9] Tanaka (1989), 4: 228.
[10] Tanaka Shozo, preface to Arahata Kanson, Yanakamura metsuboshi (Tokyo: Iwanami bunko, 1999). 8.
[11] Tanaka (1989), 7: 247.
[12] Arundhati Roy, The Cost of Living (New York: Modern Library Paperbacks, 1999).
[13] Patrick McCully, Silenced Rivers: The Ecology and Politics of Large Dams (New York: Zed Books, 2001) and Michael Goldman, Imperial Nature: The World Bank and Struggles for Social Justice in the Age of Globalization (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005).
[14] Gavan McCormack, “Minamata: The Irresponsibility of the Japanese State”
[15] David A. Fahrenthold, “Wildlife Waste is Major Water Polluter, Studies Say,” The Washington Post, 29 September 2006.