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Shaking up Japan: Edo society and the 1855 catfish picture prints.


At about 10 pm on the second day of the tenth month of 1855 (November 11 in the solar calendar Noun 1. solar calendar - a calendar based on solar cycles
calendar - a system of timekeeping that defines the beginning and length and divisions of the year
), an earthquake with a magnitude estimated between 6.9 and 7.1 shook Edo, now known as Tokyo. The earthquake's shallow focus Shallow focus is a photographic and cinematographic technique incorporating a small depth of field. In shallow focus one plane of the image is in focus while the rest is out of focus. Shallow focus typically is used to emphasize one part of the image over another.  and its epicenter near the heart of Edo caused more destruction than the magnitude might initially suggest. Estimates of deaths in and around Edo ranged from 7,000 to 10,000. Property damage from the shaking and fires was severe in places, destroying at least 14,000 structures. As many as 80 aftershocks per day continued to shake the city until nine days after the initial earthquake. Despite a relatively low 1 in 170 fatality rate fa·tal·i·ty rate
n.
See death rate.



fatality rate

see case fatality rate.
, the extensive injuries and property damage, lingering danger of fires, a long and vigorous period of aftershocks, and the locus of the destruction in Japan's de facto [Latin, In fact.] In fact, in deed, actually.

This phrase is used to characterize an officer, a government, a past action, or a state of affairs that must be accepted for all practical purposes, but is illegal or illegitimate.
 capital city exacerbated the earthquake's psychological impact. (1)

Two days after the initial earthquake, hastily printed, anonymous broadsheets and images began to appear for sale around the city. After several weeks had passed, over 400 varieties of earthquake-related prints were on the market, the majority of which featured images of giant catfish catfish, common name applied to members of the freshwater fish families constituting the suborder Nematognathi. The catfish is related to the sucker and the minnow, and like them has a complex set of bones forming a sensitive hearing apparatus. , often with anthropomorphic Having the characteristics of a human being. For example, an anthropomorphic robot has a head, arms and legs.  features. (2) These metaphoric catfish did not necessarily correspond to an actual species offish off·ish  
adj.
Inclined to be distant and reserved; aloof.



offish·ly adv.

off
, and I refer to them here by their Japanese name, namazu. The general name of catfish prints, which included visual elements and text, is namazu-e, with "e" meaning picture.

Namazu images appeared because of the folk image that movements of a giant subterranean namazu cause earthquakes. This point, however, is not sufficient to explain why namazu-e appeared in such large numbers and in such variety after this particular earthquake, especially in light of the paucity pau·ci·ty  
n.
1. Smallness of number; fewness.

2. Scarcity; dearth: a paucity of natural resources.
 of namazu images in prints connected with other destructive urban earthquakes in Japan. The namazu-e of 1855 are a window on the political and social consciousness of Edo's residents during the final decades of the Tokugawa period Tokugawa period

(1603–1867) In Japanese history, period of the military government established by Tokugawa Ieyasu with his assumption of the title of shogun in 1603. The structures Ieyasu set in place were effective for governing Japan for the next 264 years.
. Noguchi Takehiko points out that natural disaster often serves as a catalyst, accelerating and bringing to the fore problems, contradictions, and tensions below the apparently calm surface of societies. (3) The Ansei Earthquake shook the social and political foundation of Edo along with the earth's crust, and the namazu-e were the reaction of the common people to this event in its broadest sense.

Cornelis Ouwehand published a study of namazu-e in 1964 as part of a structuralist examination of Japanese folk religion Folk religion consists of beliefs, superstitions and rituals transmitted from generation to generation of a specific culture. It could be contrasted with the "organized religion" or "historical religion" in which founders, creed, theology and ecclesiastical organizations are . (4) The present essay does not attempt to improve on Ouwehand's analysis of religious phenomena, although religion plays a key role in parts of my analysis. Instead, I discuss namazu-e in the context of Japanese urban society at a time when the existing social and political order was weakening, ultimately to be replaced by a modern-style centralized cen·tral·ize  
v. cen·tral·ized, cen·tral·iz·ing, cen·tral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To draw into or toward a center; consolidate.

2.
 state in 1868. My focus is on the state of political consciousness among Edo's commoners in 1855, and I argue that they used namazu-e to express an emerging consciousness of Japanese national identity and to make veiled political statements. In this way, I seek to augment the small but growing body of literature in English that examines the final decades of the Tokugawa period (1603-1867) from the standpoint of ordinary people. (5)

The people of Edo did not view the earthquake of 1855 as a random event. Instead, they understood it within a context of other recent earthquakes and recent political events, especially the visits of Commodore One of the first personal computer companies. In 1977, Commodore Business Machines, West Chester, PA, introduced the PET computer and launched the personal computer industry along with Apple and Radio Shack. In 1982, it introduced the Commodore 64 (64K RAM) and later the Commodore 128.  Matthew Perry in 1853 and 1854. For Edo residents, the earthquake of 1855 was an act of yonaoshi, or "world rectification." In this view, the Ansei Earthquake literally shook up a society that had grown complacent, imbalanced, and sick. Regarding the earthquake as yonaoshi had political implications, and many namazu-e dealt with these implications. (6)

To contextualize con·tex·tu·al·ize  
tr.v. con·tex·tu·al·ized, con·tex·tu·al·iz·ing, con·tex·tu·al·iz·es
To place (a word or idea, for example) in a particular context.
 popular perceptions of the 1855 earthquake, I summarize the situation in Japan from the 1830s onward and discuss briefly the prevailing understanding of earthquakes. Following these preliminary discussions, I examine select aspects of Edo society expressed in the namazu-e and conclude by discussing the broader implications of these prints for our understanding of bakumatsu Japan and the Meiji Restoration Meiji restoration, The term refers to both the events of 1868 that led to the "restoration" of power to the emperor and the entire period of revolutionary changes that coincided with the Meiji emperor's reign (1868–1912). , the period of approximately 1850-1870.

A World in Mounting Turmoil, 1830-1855

Crop failures, natural disasters, and epidemics swept through Japan with severity during the time of the Tempo Famine, 1833-1837. The famine triggered riots (uchikowashi) in Edo and a popular revolt led by a former government official, Oshio Heihachiro (1793-1837). In 1830, mass religious pilgrimages to the Ise Shrine Ise Shrine
 in full Grand Shrine of Ise Japanese Ise-daijingu

Foremost Shinto shrine in Japan, at Ise, in southern Honshu. The Inner Shrine (traditionally founded 4 BC) is dedicated to the sun goddess Amaterasu.
 (okagemairi) took place on an unprecedented scale. The pilgrims were mostly farmers, and they often became unruly as they passed through towns and villages. Similar outbursts of spontaneous pilgrimage activity continued during the 1830s and later, especially at twelve year intervals. The pilgrimages were not overtly political, but they demonstrated the potential power of emotionally-charged masses of ordinary people. (7) Because these pilgrimages helped to create narratives of a deity setting a world-gone-awry back in order, they were one manifestation of the theme of redemption, which George M. Wilson has highlighted as a key characteristic of bakumatsu society. (8) The Ansei Earthquake took on additional meaning for some Japanese because it occurred during a traditional pilgrimage year (okage-doshi).

Detailed theories of purposeful cosmic intervention in society are found in specific philosophies such as Confucianism or tento thought (a syncretic syn·cre·tism  
n.
1. Reconciliation or fusion of differing systems of belief, as in philosophy or religion, especially when success is partial or the result is heterogeneous.

2.
 system of religious and philosophical ideas), but the general idea that cosmic forces intervene to correct human societies gone awry a·wry  
adv.
1. In a position that is turned or twisted toward one side; askew.

2. Away from the correct course; amiss. See Synonyms at amiss.
 had become widespread by the nineteenth century. The key realm was government, which in early nineteenth-century Japan consisted of an Edo-based bakufu (military government), headed by a shogun shogun (shō`gŭn'), title of the feudal military administrator who from the 12th cent. to the 19th cent. was, as the emperor's military deputy, the actual ruler of Japan.  (general), which directly administered about 20 percent of the country's land area. The bakufu also asserted hegemony over, but did not administer, more than 250 semi-autonomous domains (han) of varying sizes. An "emperor" (tenno) reigned in the traditional capital of Kyoto, functioning mainly as a religious and cultural figurehead figurehead, carved decoration usually representing a head or figure placed under the bowsprit of a ship. The art is of extreme antiquity. Ancient galleys and triremes carried rostrums, or beaks, on the bow to ram enemy vessels. . In the prevailing world view, an effective and appropriately benevolent government would enjoy the legitimacy of cosmic sanction. By contrast, governments addicted ad·dict·ed
adj.
1. Physiologically or psychologically dependent on a habit-forming substance.

2. Compulsively or habitually involved in a practice or behavior, such as gambling.
 to luxury and unable to maintain social order moved out of alignment with the moral principles built into the fabric of the cosmos.

As this divergence between cosmic moral principles and the state of government increased, strange atmospheric phenomena, crop failures, epidemics, earthquakes, and other natural disasters became the concrete manifestations of cosmic "displeasure." By the nineteenth century, a rich rhetorical palate palate (păl`ĭt), roof of the mouth. The front part, known as the hard palate, formed by the upper maxillary bones and the palatine bones, separates the mouth from the nasal cavity.  of symbols characterizing such misalignments was widely known. In the context of discussing popular urban media (kawaraban) at this time, Gerald Groemer points out that:
  Kawaraban hermeneutics could rely on a complex system of signs,
  symbols, analogies, correspondences, and metaphors that existed in the
  context of everyday life and effortlessly crossed the fluid borders of
  science, magic, astrology, folk belief, political/moral ideology,
  literature, poetry, and religion. This context of interpretation
  allowed explicators with sufficient insight and imagination to
  apprehend cryptic messages of Heaven, and to endow the seemingly
  accidental with a meaning and causal necessity that spoke directly to
  the concerns of reader or listener. Conveniently enough, heaven often
  communicated through newsworthy events. Sudden and disastrous natural
  phenomena could signal blunders of an inept government that had set
  nature out of balance with society. Similarly, large-scale social
  phenomena such as fads, crazes, and rumors might also be interpreted
  as a portentous sign. (9)


Governments failing to heed these warning signs would likely face popular uprisings, invasions from abroad, and other serious challenges that would eventually bring them down. Classical Chinese Classical Chinese
n.
The written form of Chinese from about the fifth century b.c. to the end of the Han dynasty in 220 a.d.

adj.
 political theory regarded this phenomenon as the passing of Heaven's mandate from one dynasty to another, and most Japanese interpreted the politics of natural disasters in a similar light.

Organized society never collapsed on any large scale in nineteenth-century Japan, but serious strains gradually became apparent to all. Social anxiety levels in many parts of Japan began to rise, reaching crescendos in 1866, a peak year for rural uprisings and urban riots, and 1867, during which frenzied outbursts of dancing called ee ja nai ka Not to be confused with Eejanaika (roller coaster).
Ee ja nai ka (ええじゃないか|
 (a refrain chanted by the dancers) swept through large areas of urban and rural Japan. The Ansei Earthquake was an important milestone in these rising anxiety levels because it literally shook the residents of Edo out of a relatively insular insular /in·su·lar/ (-sdbobr-ler) pertaining to the insula or to an island, as the islands of Langerhans.

in·su·lar
adj.
Of or being an isolated tissue or island of tissue.
 mind set and into a heightened awareness of broader problems facing themselves and Japan as a whole. (10) Furthermore, the 1855 Ansei Earthquake may even have conditioned popular expectations of major change in 1867 owing to owing to
prep.
Because of; on account of: I couldn't attend, owing to illness.

owing to prepdebido a, por causa de 
 a coincidence of the twelve-year calendar cycle. The first indication for Edo's residents that major change was in the offing coming; arriving in the foreseeable future.
visible but not nearby.

See also: Offing Offing
 was the arrival of Matthew Perry's fleet.

Tokugawa Japan (1603-1867) was not closed to the world, but its limited foreign relations Foreign relations may refer to:
  • Diplomacy, the art and practice of conducting negotiations between representatives of groups or nations
  • Foreign policy, a set of political goals that seeks to outline how a particular country will interact with other countries of the
 were under tight bakufu control. (11) During the seventeenth century, the bakufu developed trade and/or diplomatic relations with Korea, the Ryukyu Kingdom (present-day Okinawa Prefecture, Japan), Holland, and China. The basis of these foreign relations was a combination of bakufu military power and Chinese-derived notions of foreign relations as status-affirming ritual (Ch. li; Jp. rei). By the nineteenth century, these early patterns of limited foreign relations had become rigid bakufu traditions, at odds with an increasingly interconnected world.

Throughout the 1800s, increasing numbers of American whaling whaling, the hunting of whales for the oil that can be rendered from their flesh, for meat, and for baleen (whalebone). Historically, whale oil was economically the most important. Early Whaling


Whaling for subsistence dates to prehistoric times.
 and trading vessels, and sometimes shipwrecked sailors, began to appear in Japanese waters. Ships in distress sometimes made their way into Japanese ports, where the typical response was to provide minimal assistance and send them on their way with a warning not to come back. When their vessels were damaged beyond the possibility of repair, repatriation Repatriation

The process of converting a foreign currency into the currency of one's own country.

Notes:
If you are American, converting British Pounds back to U.S. dollars is an example of repatriation.
 of shipwrecked U.S. sailors usually took place via Chinese or Dutch ships sailing out of Nagasaki. As American whaling activity and trade with China increased, pressure in congress grew to establish formal diplomatic and commercial relations with Japan. In 1852, Commodore Matthew Perry began preparations to sail to Japan, and his small fleet arrived in Uraga Bay (near Edo) in July, 1853. There, Perry marched ashore, conveyed formal letters from the U.S. president, stated his intention of negotiating a treaty and, when asked for time to think the matter over, told bakufu officials that he would return the next year. After several months in China, Perry returned to Edo in February, 1854 with a much larger fleet, one purpose of which was to intimidate in·tim·i·date  
tr.v. in·tim·i·dat·ed, in·tim·i·dat·ing, in·tim·i·dates
1. To make timid; fill with fear.

2. To coerce or inhibit by or as if by threats.
 the bakufu. Perry's strategy worked, and the bakufu reluctantly signed a diplomatic treaty with the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  in March, 1854.

Some Japanese welcomed this expansion of traditional foreign relations, others deeply resented it, and many had no strong opinion but were vaguely uneasy about contact with powerful and strange foreign countries. In any case, Perry's activities made clear to all that the bakufu had become too weak to keep foreigners Foreigners

alienage

the condition of being an alien.

androlepsy

Law. the seizure of foreign subjects to enforce a claim for justice or other right against their nation.

gypsyologist, gipsyologist

Rare.
 out of Japan. In Edo, there was a delayed reaction delayed reaction
n.
An allergic or immune response that begins 24 to 48 hours after exposure to an antigen to which the individual has been sensitized.
 to Perry among ordinary people. His first visit took place outside of Edo and was brief. The popular press reported on it, but for most residents of Edo Perry's flotilla was an exotic sideshow See Windows SideShow.  of passing curiosity. (12) Among samurai samurai (sä'mrī`), knights of feudal Japan, retainers of the daimyo. This aristocratic warrior class arose during the 12th-century wars between the Taira and Minamoto clans and was , however, especially government officials, Perry's initial visit caused consternation. Talk of the possibility of war increased, commodity prices rose, and wealthier residents of Edo sought to hide or otherwise secure their possessions. A briefly popular 1853 image by Utagawa Kuniyoshi Utagawa Kuniyoshi (Japanese: 歌川国芳) (1797 - April 14, 1861) was one of the last great masters of the Japanese ukiyo-e style of woodblock prints and painting and belonged to the Utagawa school.  illustrates this state of consternation among social elites through symbols and allusions. It depicts scenes of confusion around a bewildered painter, who likely represents the shogun or the bakufu in general. (13) In one of these scenes, a monkey is trying to pin down a namazu with a smooth bottle gourd bottle gourd
n.
See calabash.

Noun 1. bottle gourd - Old World climbing plant with hard-shelled bottle-shaped gourds as fruits
Lagenaria siceraria, calabash
, an image with roots in Japanese iconography iconography (ī'kŏnŏg`rəfē) [Gr.,=image-drawing] or iconology [Gr.,=image-study], in art history, the study and interpretation of figural representations, either individual or symbolic, religious or secular;  dating to the early fifteenth century. In this case, the monkey is trying, without success, to restrain the upheaval resulting from Perry's visit. (14)

The bakufu's hurried attempt to construct offshore artillery batteries In military science, a battery is a unit of artillery guns, mortars, or rockets, so grouped in order to facilitate battlefield communication and command and control, as well as to provide dispersion.  to defend the approach to the shogun's castle, more than Perry's first visit, impressed on Edo's residents the potential gravity of the situation. Staring in the ninth month of 1853, the bakufu sought to build eleven such batteries, but high costs quickly reduced the number to five. Even the scaled-down project strained bakufu finances. The guns were not functioning by the time of Perry's second visit, during which some of his ships sailed ominously to within cannon range of Edo Castle Edo Castle (江戸城 Edo-jō), also known under the name Chiyoda Castle (千代田城 Chiyoda-jō) was built in 1457 by Ōta Dōkan in what is now the Chiyoda ward of Tokyo, but was then known as Edo, Toshima District, .

The Japanese islands lie in a zone of frequent seismic activity, and the many small earthquakes that occur there occasion little notice, now or in the past. A series of major earthquakes, however, or earthquakes occurring in parts of the country that rarely experience them, would have been an ominous portent. In 1830, an earthquake of about magnitude 6.5 shook the imperial capital of Kyoto causing about 280 deaths, 1,300 injuries, and an unusually large number of aftershocks. (15) Minor earthquakes in Kyoto were common, but the city rarely experienced deadly earthquakes. The 1830 earthquake was an occasion for worry in part because of popular press reports that exaggerated the damage and because the shaking occurred almost in concert with the promulgation PROMULGATION. The order given to cause a law to be executed, and to make it public it differs from publication. (q.v.) 1 Bl. Com. 45; Stat. 6 H. VI., c. 4.
     2.
 of a new era name, Tempo. Matsuzaki Kodo, a Confucian scholar living near Edo, took anxious notice of both the Kyoto earthquake and the unseasonable un·sea·son·a·ble  
adj.
1. Not suitable to or appropriate for the season.

2. Not characteristic of the time of year: unseasonable weather.

3. Poorly timed; inopportune.
 blooming of cherry trees. Writing in his diary a day after the Tempo era started, he said "Our ruler is virtuous, and our habits upright ... so there should be no reason for any disasters.... All we can do is pray for the Heavenly Protection of yesterday's new era name." (16) Such a view of the relationship between natural phenomena and earthly political authorities Political authorities hold positions of power or influence within a system of government. Although some are exclusive to one or another form of government, many exist within several types.  was widespread at the time, not limited to Confucian scholars or other elites. (17)

Although living far from Kyoto, Matsuzaki quickly learned of the earthquake because of the fast intercity in·ter·cit·y  
adj.
Relating to, involving, or connecting two or more cities: intercity rivalry; an intercity bus.


Intercity
Adjective

trademark
 news network. (18) This network, and the urban popular press that depended on it, informed the residents of Edo of several severe earthquakes close enough in time to Perry's arrival to seem especially meaningful in hindsight. The 1847 magnitude 7.4 Zenkoji Earthquake got its name from a Buddhist temple in Shinano, present-day Nagano Prefecture Nagano Prefecture (長野県 Nagano-ken . (19) Estimates of the death toll vary widely, ranging from about 2,500 to 10,000. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 one newspaper account:
  In the third month of 1847 on the 24th day around 10pm, a large
  earthquake struck Shinano. Unfortunately, that month the Zenko Temple
  (Zenkoji) was displaying a Buddhist statue, and so people from all
  around had crowded in to see it. A large crowd was milling around,
  which exacerbated the panic when the earthquake struck. Many of them
  were pinned down by or crushed beneath collapsing houses. Moreover,
  fire flew from the collapsed houses in an instant, and before long,
  the district in front of the temple gate was a sea of flames.
  Aftershocks sounding like thunder continued without cease, there being
  more than 80 throughout the night. A fissure appeared in the earth
  from which flowed mud and sand. A cliff overhanging the north fork of
  the Sai River collapsed, which cause massive flooding. People say that
  disasters two or three deep caused the deaths of 30,000. Prior to the
  earthquake, the temple put up a notice board of regulations for
  viewing the Buddhist image in front of its gate. It disappeared in the
  night, as did a second one. After putting up a third one, a guard was
  posted around the clock. Reflecting on this matter, people claimed
  that it must have been a way that the main Buddha of the temple tried
  to warn the people of an impending earthquake. (20)


Mention of the Zenkoji Earthquake was common in the namazu-e of 1855.

The Zenkoji Earthquake does not seem have made a significant psychological impact on people of Edo at the time of its occurrence. Noguchi points out that Edo's residents were remarkably insular in their concerns and paid little attention to events outside of their city. Indeed, soon after the press in Edo reported the Zenkoji Earthquake, an irreverent ir·rev·er·ent  
adj.
1. Lacking or exhibiting a lack of reverence; disrespectful.

2. Critical of what is generally accepted or respected; satirical: irreverent humor.
 verse (senryu) making a morbid morbid /mor·bid/ (mor´bid)
1. pertaining to, affected with, or inducing disease; diseased.

2. unhealthy or unwholesome.

3.
 joke about the wide variety of funeral services funeral service nmisa de cuerpo presente

funeral service nservice m funèbre

funeral service funeral n
 available in Shinano appeared. It was only after the Ansei Earthquake struck that Edo's residents retrospectively regarded the Zenkoji and other earthquakes as having a significant connection to their lives. (21) The Ansei Earthquake violently expanded the consciousness of Edo's residents, prompting them to imagine themselves as part of a broader community that extended well beyond the borders of their own city.

Odawara is a city just south of Edo, which experienced a magnitude 6.7 earthquake on the second day of the second month, 1853. According to one newspaper account, houses "collapsed like chess pieces," and the damage extended well beyond Odawara itself. A corner of Odawara castle Odawara Castle (小田原城 Odawara-jō  collapsed, and the shaking and subsequent fires killed roughly 3,780. (22) The next year, an earthquake of approximately magnitude 7.2 occurred on the fifteenth day of the sixth month, 1854. It shook Iga-Ueno in present-day Mie Prefecture Mie Prefecture (三重県 Mie-ken  and the Ise and Konoe areas in present-day Shiga Prefecture. This earthquake caused widespread property damage, destroying over 20,000 homes and was widely reported in the popular press of the major urban areas. (23)

The year of Perry's return visit saw more than its share of major earthquakes. In addition to Odawara, two magnitude 8.4 earthquakes with offshore epicenters shook a vast area along the Pacific coast of Japan on consecutive days. The Ansei Tokai Earthquake shook a region extending south from the outskirts of Edo to Ise Bay I·se Bay  

An arm of the Pacific Ocean on the south-central coast of Honshu, Japan. The city of Ise, near the entrance to the bay, has several ancient Shinto shrines built in a distinctive archaic style of architecture. Population: 99,000.
 on the fourth day of the eleventh month. The next day, the Ansei-Nankai Earthquake shook a wide area of the coast further south, centered approximately on the Osaka. Both earthquakes generated tsunamis, the first of which severely damaged the Russian warship warship, any ship built or armed for naval combat. The forerunners of the modern warship were the men-of-war of the 18th and early 19th cent., such as the ship of the line, frigate, corvette, sloop of war (see sloop), brig, and cutter.  Diana, which had sailed into Shimoda (near Yokohama) to negotiate a treaty. Estimates of the death toll from each quake vary, but 3,000 apiece is a typical figure. (24)

When Edo shook in 1855, prominent bakufu official Matsudaira Shungaku (1828-1890) reacted in part by writing a memo to Abe Masahiro
This is a Japanese name; the family name is Abe.


Abe Masahiro (阿部正弘|
 (1819-1857), the de facto leader of the bakufu. Matsudaira listed recent earthquakes, other natural disasters, and the unwelcome visits of American, Russian, and British naval vessels. Together with the present disaster in Edo, these events "definitely constitute a heavenly warning," he concluded. (25) The Edo popular press and the namazu-e also retroactively ret·ro·ac·tive  
adj.
Influencing or applying to a period prior to enactment: a retroactive pay increase.



[French rétroactif, from Latin
 linked the Ansei Earthquake with the series of severe earthquakes going back to 1847 and the recent arrival of Perry's so-called "black ships The Black Ships (in Japanese, 黒船, kurofune) was the name given to Western vessels arriving in Japan between the 15th and 19th centuries. In particular, it refers to Mississippi, Plymouth, Saratoga, and Susquehanna ." Prevented by censorship regulations from stating the same explicit conclusion as did Matsudaira in his memo, the popular press and makers of namazu-e left such conclusions to readers' imaginations.

Causes of Earthquakes

Prior to the twentieth century, East Asian theories of earthquakes typically relied on the notion of the five agents of yin and yang Yin and Yang
Noun

two complementary principles of Chinese philosophy: Yin is negative, dark, and feminine, Yang is positive, bright, and masculine [Chinese yin dark + yang bright]
. The idea of yin and yang--complementary opposite forces or tendencies underlying the world and its processes--developed in ancient China. By the dawn of the Common Era, Chinese thinkers had come up with elaborations on this basic idea, the most influential of which was that yin and yang make themselves manifest in the universe through the five agents (Ch. wuxing, Jp. gogyo) of water, fire, metal, earth, and wood. Chinese academics developed elaborate theories of cosmological cos·mol·o·gy  
n. pl. cos·mol·o·gies
1. The study of the physical universe considered as a totality of phenomena in time and space.

2.
a.
 correspondences in which the five agents played a key role in explaining observed phenomena and predicting future developments in realms as diverse as medicine, politics, astronomy, history, cooking, and agriculture. Over time, the basic idea of yin and yang operating in a balance regulated by five agents became widely known among people of all walks of life throughout East Asia East Asia

A region of Asia coextensive with the Far East.



East Asian adj. & n.
.

By the nineteenth century, nearly all Japanese regarded earthquakes as resulting from a temporary imbalance in the proportions of the five agents of yin and yang within the earth. Not everyone agreed on the details, but the basic idea had long been intellectual and social common sense. The Ansei kenmonroku (Accounts of the Ansei era) contains a typical explanation of earthquakes. Normally, water (purely yin) overcomes fire (purely yang). Furthermore, water is the agent normally holding sway in the subterranean environment. Earthquakes occur when fire overcomes water underground, thus reversing the normal state. (26) Popular newspapers often started their accounts of earthquakes with a brief statement of yin and yang forces being out of balance. For example, the text of an account of the Odawara Earthquake (1853) explains that a clash of yin and yang forces resulted in thunder in the skies and shaking of the earth. An account of an earthquake in Ise (1854) employs the same explanation verbatim ver·ba·tim  
adj.
Using exactly the same words; corresponding word for word: a verbatim report of the conversation.

adv.
. (27) The text of one large namazu-e provides a lengthy explanation of the causes of earthquakes that combines yin-yang correlative Having a reciprocal relationship in that the existence of one relationship normally implies the existence of the other.

Mother and child, and duty and claim, are correlative terms.
 cosmology cosmology, area of science that aims at a comprehensive theory of the structure and evolution of the entire physical universe. Modern Cosmological Theories
, popular morality, and geomancy ge·o·man·cy  
n.
Divination by means of lines and figures or by geographic features.



[Middle English geomancie, from Medieval Latin ge
 (Ch. fengshui, Jp. fusui), visually enhanced by exotic looking Chinese deities Noun 1. Chinese deity - a deity worshipped by the ancient Chinese
deity, divinity, god, immortal - any supernatural being worshipped as controlling some part of the world or some aspect of life or who is the personification of a force
. (28) Another print even features a denial by several namazu that mere fish have the power to cause earthquakes. Instead, the namazu protest, earthquakes are caused by imbalances in yin and yang forces. (29)

Various folk explanations for earthquakes co-existed with explanations based on the five agents of yin and yang. Most five agent based explanations were sufficiently vague that they did not necessarily contradict folk explanations based on popular deities or supernatural creatures moving around under the earth. Metaphoric thinking was common whereby the supernatural creatures, deities, and other mechanisms of folk theories were concrete representations of the abstract processes of academic theories. For example, a broadsheet issued just after the Ansei Earthquake explained its cause in terms of both yin and yang forces and the subterranean movements of a giant namazu, but it called the namazu-based explanation an "unsophisticated theory." (30) Japanese folk explanations during the late eighteenth century attributed earthquakes to such things as: 1) the movement of a giant creature (an ox, a dragon/snake, or a giant fish) supporting the earth; 2) the movement of a deity or giant supporting the earth; 3) movement or shaking of a pillar or band supporting the earth; 4) the wild sex acts of male and female deities; and 5) careless movements of human ancestors. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the notion that a giant serpentine serpentine (sûr`pəntēn, –tīn), hydrous silicate of magnesium. It occurs in crystalline form only as a pseudomorph having the form of some other mineral and is generally found in the form of chrysotile (silky fibers) and  dragon moving under the earth caused the earth to shake was especially popular. This dragon gradually transformed into a giant namazu in the popular imagination. (31)

Starting in the seventeenth century, conceptual links among namazu, earthquakes, and the Kashima Shrine Kashima Shrine (鹿島神宮 Kashima-jingū) is a shrine dedicated to the Shinto kami Takemikazuchi-no-mikoto (武甕槌大神), one of the patron deity of martial arts.  became increasingly evident. (32) A picture scroll from 1793 depicting the Kanda Festival parade in Edo depicts a huge namazu float pulled, pushed, and otherwise attended by 57 people. Atop the namazu's head is a replica of the Kashima Shrine's foundation stone (kaname ishi). (33) By this time, the notion that earthquakes result from the subterranean movements of a giant namazu pinned under the Kashima Shrine by an oval-shaped foundation stone had become well established. Today, most Japanese are vaguely aware of some kind of a folksy folk·sy  
adj. folk·si·er, folk·si·est Informal
1. Simple and unpretentious in behavior.

2. Characterized by informality and affability: a friendly, folksy town.

3.
 link between catfish and earthquakes, but science education at the end of the nineteenth century undermined any lingering literal belief in the namazu as a cause of earthquakes.

Some Initial Reactions to the 1855 Ansei Edo Earthquake

Within two days of the Ansei Earthquake, entrepreneurs set up makeshift printing presses and began producing broadsheets containing information of immediate interest such as news about the extent of the earthquake damage and information about which parts of the city were on fire. (34) Namazu-e were part of this initial round of commercial print production. Prints produced within roughly the first ten days to two weeks of the initial shaking generally reflected the emotions of fear, disgust, and anger. Fear of further damage generated talismanic tal·is·man·ic   also tal·is·man·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to talismans: talismanic formulas.

2.
 namazu-e, many of which featured an image of the Kashima deity reasserting control over the earthquake namazu. One typical example is a print with the title "Jishin o-mamori" (Protection against earthquakes, Figure 1). (35) Here the thunder deity employs his mallet mallet,
n a hammering instrument.

mallet, hard,
n a small hammer with a leather-, rubber-, fiber-, or metal-faced head; used to supply force or to supplement hand force for the compaction of foil or amalgam and to seat cast
 to help the Kashima deity pin down a giant namazu (with a dragon-like tail) with a sword. At the top left of the print is "Kashima" written in a special spirit writing script associated with popular Daoism. Directly above it is an iconographic i·co·nog·ra·phy  
n. pl. i·co·nog·ra·phies
1.
a. Pictorial illustration of a subject.

b. The collected representations illustrating a subject.

2.
 depiction of the Big Dipper Big Dipper, familiar configuration of stars visible in the constellation Ursa Major (see Ursa Major and Ursa Minor).  constellation, thought to be an especially lucky set of stars. (36) The small namazu in the foreground wear robes with characters on their backs identifying four place names: Ise, Shinshu (=Shinano), Odawara, and Kyoto. These names correspond to the major earthquakes from the recent past. The text accompanying the print indicates that it should be hung up in the home to ward off further earthquake damage.

Kitani Makoto has analyzed namazu-e from the standpoint of the broader Japanese practice of yakuharai, the removal of misfortune by ritualistic rit·u·al·is·tic  
adj.
1. Relating to ritual or ritualism.

2. Advocating or practicing ritual.



rit
 behavior and appeals to deities. He points out that a typical procedure when a child would come down with smallpox smallpox, acute, highly contagious disease causing a high fever and successive stages of severe skin eruptions. The disease dates from the time of ancient Egypt or before.  was for the parents to welcome the smallpox deity to their home and speak kindly to it. Then, they would politely bid it to return to its own dwelling, in the hope that the deity and its associated disease would soon depart. There was no attempt to fight with the deity or to regard it explicitly as an enemy. The talismanic namazu-e served as similar attempts to influence a powerful force in nature, thereby avoiding serious harm from it. (37) There were instances, however, in which namazu-e took a different posture vis-a-vis these forces.

Although comparatively rare, some namazu-e convey an irreverent sense of disgust that the deities would have so badly mismanaged the balance of cosmic forces. In Namazu to kaname-ishi (Namazu and the foundation stone, Figure 2), (38) fires rage and the earth shakes above the sinister-looking figure of a giant namazu. Ebisu, a lesser deity filling in for Kashima, who is out of town, looks tired as he dozes against the foundation stone. (39) The strange looking man to the left of the print is the thunder deity, engaging in a peculiar pastime of some Edo residents, which we might call "extreme farting," or perhaps "thunder farting." The basic object of this sport was to make more noise than one's opponents. According to the scholar Hiraga Gennai
This is a Japanese name; the family name is Hiraga.
Hiraga Gennai (平賀 源内 
 (1729-1779) in his treatise Hohiron (On farting), thunder farting made its debut in 1774 at the Ryogoku Bridge, a major site of popular culture displays in Edo. Small drums issue forth from the thunder deity's posterior, no doubt to emphasize the booming sonic element in his performance. The man on horseback man on horseback
n. pl. men on horseback
1. A man, usually a military leader, whose popular influence and power may afford him the position of dictator, as in a time of political crisis.

2. A dictator.
 at right is Kashima, rushing back from his meeting with other major deities in Izumo. These incompetent deities have allowed a major disaster to unfold in the form of a fire-ravaged, post-earthquake Edo. (40) Money (large gold coins Gold coins

Coin minted in gold, such as the American Eagle or the Canadian Maple Leaf.
) is falling from the burning city, presaging a theme that became prominent in namazu-e produced during the rebuilding phase of the earthquake's aftermath: the redistribution of wealth.

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

This disgust at the Kashima deity's ineptitude Ineptitude
See also Awkwardness.

Brown, Charlie

meek hero unable to kick a football, fly a kite, or win a baseball game. [Comics: “Peanuts” in Horn, 543]

Capt. Queeg

incompetent commander of the minesweeper Caine.
 sometimes manifested itself in a different manner: demoting the Kashima deity and replacing him with Amaterasu, the solar deity located at the Ise shrine far to the south of Edo. Prior to the Ansei Earthquake, all indications are that the people of Edo had little interest in or knowledge of Amaterasu, who was the clan deity of the imperial family and therefore better known in Kyoto. One characteristic of the Tokugawa period was the political and cultural eclipse of the imperial court by the bakufu. Only after the arrival of Perry did bakufu opponents advocating a policy of joi, "expel ex·pel  
tr.v. ex·pelled, ex·pel·ling, ex·pels
1. To force or drive out: expel an invader.

2.
 the barbarians," began to look to the imperial court as a symbolic counterweight coun·ter·weight  
n.
1. A weight used as a counterbalance.

2. A force or influence equally counteracting another.



coun
 to the bakufu. These samurai dissidents later took up the slogan sonno-joi, "revere Revere, city (1990 pop. 42,786), Suffolk co., E Mass., a residential suburb of Boston, on Massachusetts Bay; settled c.1630, set off from Chelsea and named for Paul Revere 1871, inc. as a city 1914.  the sovereign, expel the barbarians" as anti-bakufu rhetoric. The sovereign of this slogan was the mysterious emperor in Kyoto, not the shogun in Edo. The term Meiji Restoration refers to the ostensible Apparent; visible; exhibited.

Ostensible authority is power that a principal, either by design or through the absence of ordinary care, permits others to believe his or her agent possesses.
 restoring of the emperor to his allegedly proper role as both civil and religious sovereign in the wake of the bakufu's collapse.

We see in some namazu-e the first signs in Edo of a significant expansion of popular consciousness to embrace Amaterasu as a savior figure. Some of these prints also imply a link between Amaterasu and the imperial family, but the connection is tenuous and the emperor an Emperor An (安帝) is the posthumous name of several Chinese emperors. It can refer to:
  • Emperor An of Han (r. 106 - 125)
  • Emperor An of Jin (r. 396 - 403, 404 - 418)
 abstraction. The image of a quasi-divine but earthly emperor in military uniform as head of state began to take hold in the popular imagination only after the Meiji Restoration, propagated with considerable energy by the new state. As Takashi Fujitani has pointed out, insofar in·so·far  
adv.
To such an extent.

Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice
 as pre-Restoration residents of Edo were even cognizant of the emperor's existence, they tended to see him as a popular, wish-granting deity. (41) In the namazu-e of 1855, Amaterasu appears as an abstract savior deity, usually represented by the symbol of the sun (often as a person whose head is the shining sun) and/or the white horse of the Ise shrine. Namazu o kerichirasu Ise jingu jinme (sacred horse of the Ise shrine kicking away the namazu, Figure 3) (42) is a good example of this type. The powerful horse, with sacred paper (gohei) substituting for a rider, kicks away several namazu who groan in pain. Notice the many short, slender lines around the horse. They are its hair. According to rumor, people reported seeing a white horse (or three horses) passing over Edo just after the earthquake. The horse(s) shook off strands of hair, the possession of even one of which would protect the human bearer against death and injury. (43) This falling hair is reminiscent of the falling paper talismans (ofudafuri) that touched off the frenzied ee ja nai ka dancing of 1867. (44) The man at left trying to control the powerful horse is probably the Kashima deity in his typical samurai guise (compare with Figure 1).

There are other namazu-e depicting the Kashima deity in supporting roles supporting role nsecond rôle m

supporting role nruolo non protagonista 
 subordinate to Amaterasu or in a mildly antagonistic antagonistic adjective Referring to any combination of 2 or more drugs, which results in a therapeutic effect that is less than the sum of each drug's effect. Cf Additive, Synergism.  relationship with Amaterasu. In one image, for example, Amaterasu, Kashima, and Hachiman (a popular deity with strong Buddhist connections) ride horses across the sky of a devastated dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 Edo. Amaterasu orders the namazu to depart from Edo quietly and dispenses strands of horse hair, his back turned to Kashima. Kashima comments on the severity of the destruction and holds the foundation stone aloft, but the stone is of no use up in the sky. (45) In this image, Amaterasu and Kashima are of roughly the same size and occupy the same height in the sky. In a different print, however, Amaterasu, called the "imperial ancestor of great Japan" (Dai-Nippon teiso), towers above the smaller figure of Kashima, who assists in distributing divine horse hair along side of six other local Edo deities. (46) Clearly the Ksahima deity has been demoted in this print. The text of the print refers to Japan as a "divine country" (shinkoku), whose people are fortunate that Amaterasu, the emperor (Mikado mikado (mĭkä`dō), a former title of the emperor of Japan used chiefly in the English language. ), the shogun, and the domain lords (daimyo daimyo (dī`myô) [Jap.,=great name], the great feudal landholders of Japan, the territorial barons as distinguished from the kuge, or court nobles. Great tax-free estates were built up from the 8th cent. ), are all benevolent and concerned for their wellbeing. (47) Here we see a vision of Japan that includes land, deities, and rulers, similar to that which the Meiji state would start promoting slightly over a decade later. While few namazu-e are as explicit as this one in positing Amaterasu's superiority over the deities of Edo, many do reveal a degree of tension between Kashima and Amaterasu, as well as the suggestion that the impact of the earthquake was felt not only in Edo but throughout Japan. (48)

[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]

Korashimerareru namazu (Subdued sub·due  
tr.v. sub·dued, sub·du·ing, sub·dues
1. To conquer and subjugate; vanquish. See Synonyms at defeat.

2. To quiet or bring under control by physical force or persuasion; make tractable.

3.
 namazu, Figure 4) (49) reflects raw anger directed at a giant namazu itself, with the Kashima deity as one member of a small crowd gathered to assail as·sail  
tr.v. as·sailed, as·sail·ing, as·sails
1. To attack with or as if with violent blows; assault.

2. To attack verbally, as with ridicule or censure. See Synonyms at attack.

3.
 the beast. A courtesan cour·te·san  
n.
A woman prostitute, especially one whose clients are members of a royal court or men of high social standing.



[French courtisane, from Old French, from Old Italian cortigiana
 attempts to strike the namazu with her long smoking pipe, a shopkeeper beats the namazu with his abacus abacus, in architecture
abacus (ăb`əkəs), in architecture, flat slab forming the top member of a capital. In classical orders it varies from a square form having unmolded sides in the Greek Doric, to thinner proportions and
, and a traveling book seller moves in menacingly. The Kashima deity is about to thrust the foundation stone on top of the hapless namazu. In the foreground, the spirit of a dead man pulls on one of the namazu's whiskers See metal whiskers. . Amidst this commotion, two members of the construction trades are trying to restrain the angry crowd. One of them, identified as a carpenter by the characters on his jacket, is himself being attacked by a charred, skeletal man, someone who was burned to death in the fires. Why are the construction workers defending the namazu? As we will see in detail below, they and others enjoyed an economic windfall from the earthquake. This motif of an angry crowd attacking a giant namazu while members of the construction trades attempt to defend it is common in the namazu-e.

The namazu-e described above indicate ambivalence vis-a-vis the local deities. On the one hand, residents of Edo urgently looked to Kashima, the thunder deity, and Ebisu to reassert reassert
Verb

1. to state or declare again

2. reassert oneself to become significant or noticeable again: reality had reasserted itself

Verb 1.
 control over the earthquake namazu and restore the cosmic forces to a peaceful balance. On the other hand, even in namazu-e not explicitly critical of the deities, it was obvious that they had permitted vast destruction to take place by failing to do their usual work or at least not doing it diligently. Therefore, another possibility implicit or explicit in some of the namazu-e was to demote de·mote  
tr.v. de·mot·ed, de·mot·ing, de·motes
To reduce in grade, rank, or status.



[de- + (pro)mote.
 Kashima and rely instead on the saving power of Amaterasu.

[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]

A Complex Society

Much of the ambivalence in the namazu-e derived from mixed views of the earthquake itself. Not all residents of Edo saw it as a disaster or tragedy. After the earth stopped shaking and the fires died down, it became increasingly clear that the earthquake had harmed some social groups while benefiting others. Anyone seriously injured in·jure  
tr.v. in·jured, in·jur·ing, in·jures
1. To cause physical harm to; hurt.

2. To cause damage to; impair.

3.
 or killed, of course, would have been among those harmed. Otherwise, one's occupation became the critical factor in viewing the earthquake as either a setback or an opportunity for profit. O-namazu-go no namayoi (Tipsiness tip·sy  
adj. tip·si·er, tip·si·est
1. Slightly intoxicated.

2. Unsteady or crooked.



[From tip2.
 following the great namazu, Figure 5) (50) depicts a large group still somewhat disoriented dis·o·ri·ent  
tr.v. dis·o·ri·ent·ed, dis·o·ri·ent·ing, dis·o·ri·ents
To cause (a person, for example) to experience disorientation.

Adj. 1.
 in the immediate wake of the earthquake. The Kashima deity vigorously skewers the giant fish, laid out on a table, with a sword. The suppressed namazu divides the print into upper and lower sections. The dozens of people depicted in the print thus divide into two groups. Those at the top are labeled "smiling," while those at the bottom are "weeping" and "have plenty of free time" that is, they are unemployed. The smiling group includes a carpenter, a plasterer, a seller of lumber, a blacksmith, a roof tile merchant, an elite courtesan, an ordinary prostitute, a physician, and sellers of certain types of ready-to-eat foods. In total, the print depicts about 30 specific occupations as profiting from the earthquake. The crying group includes a teahouse proprietor, a seller of eels, a variety of entertainers such as musicians, comedians, and storytellers, a seller of luxury goods, a diamond seller, and a seller of imported goods--25 specific occupations in all. (51) Other namazu-e taking up the theme of society divided along the lines of economic winners and losers portray similar sets of occupations, though the elite courtesan sometimes ends up in the "idle" category. (52)

[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]

Although the earthquake has divided this society, it has also brought people together. A print like O-namazu-go no namayoi displays the characteristic ambivalence already noted in other contexts. The people on each side of the namazu are dressed similarly and assume similar postures. The winners are not celebrating, and everyone looks more dazed daze  
tr.v. dazed, daz·ing, daz·es
1. To stun, as with a heavy blow or shock; stupefy.

2. To dazzle, as with strong light.

n.
A stunned or bewildered condition.
 than anything else (despite the "smiling" label, nobody is actually grinning). The earthquake has united them in a common terrifying ter·ri·fy  
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies
1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten.

2. To menace or threaten; intimidate.
 experience. Certainly the sellers of luxury goods, for example, will suffer from the diversion of money to such basics as building supplies and constructing work. There is no suggestion in this print, however, of censure A formal, public reprimand for an infraction or violation.

From time to time deliberative bodies are forced to take action against members whose actions or behavior runs counter to the group's acceptable standards for individual behavior. In the U.S.
 or that those on the crying side of the namazu deserve any sort of cosmic punishment. On the contrary, those on the losing side deserve compassion and assistance.

Strong Medicine

That there was an element of random chance behind the fate of individuals caught in the earthquake did not mean that event itself was random. In the larger scheme of things, many residents of Edo regarded the Ansei Earthquake as a purposeful attempt by the cosmic forces to rectify a society out of balance. One reason for this imbalance was a stagnation Stagnation

A period of little or no growth in the economy. Economic growth of less than 2-3% is considered stagnation. Sometimes used to describe low trading volume or inactive trading in securities.

Notes:
A good example of stagnation was the U.S. economy in the 1970s.
 of currency caused by Edo's elite merchants hoarding wealth. The label "merchant" can be misleading, however, particularly because of the inaccurate tendency to view Tokugawa Japan as a society of four social classes with merchants at the bottom. Merchants did not constitute a legally-defined social class, and they ranged from itinerate i·tin·er·ate  
intr.v. i·tin·er·at·ed, i·tin·er·at·ing, i·tin·er·ates
To travel from place to place.



[Late Latin itiner
 peddlers barely eking eke 1  
tr.v. eked, ek·ing, ekes
1. To supplement with great effort. Used with out: eked out an income by working two jobs.

2.
 out a living to business tycoons so powerful that they managed the finances of large domains. It was these extremely wealthy merchants, at least in the thinking of many of Edo's common people, who caused problems by hoarding goods to manipulate prices and by storing up large quantities of coins, thereby preventing specie SPECIE. Metallic money issued by public authority.
     2. This term is used in contradistinction to paper money, which in some countries is emitted by the government, and is a mere engagement which represents specie.
 from circulating in society. In short, these great merchants caused something akin to constipation in the social body, and the earthquake was strong purgative purgative /pur·ga·tive/ (purg´it-iv) cathartic (1, 2).

pur·ga·tive
n.
An agent used for purging the bowels.

adj.
Tending to cause evacuation of the bowels.
 medicine.

The idea of the free circulation of vital essences as the basis of bodily or social health was a core concept in Tokugawa Japan, embraced by intellectuals and ordinary people alike. For example, nearly all Tokugawa Confucian scholars stressed the need for wealth to circulate in a healthy society. "The wealth of the realm," wrote Yamaga Soko (1622-1685), "belongs to the realm. It is not the wealth of a single person. Well should it circulate." (53) In typical Confucian microcosmic-macrocosmic thinking, Kaibara Ekken
This is a Japanese name; the family name is Kaibara.
Kaibara Ekken or Ekiken (貝原 益軒, also known as Atsunobu
 (1630-1714) likened the flow of wealth in society to the flow of vital fluids through the body and the flow of vital energy through the cosmos:
  If the flow of material force (ki) through heaven and earth is
  obstructed, abnormalities arise, causing natural disasters such as
  violent windstorms, floods and droughts, and earthquakes. If the
  things of the world are long collected together, such obstruction is
  inevitable. In humans, if the blood, vital essence (ki), food and
  drink do not circulate and flow, the result is disease. Likewise, if
  vast material wealth is collected in one place and not permitted to
  benefit and enrich others, disaster will strike later. (54)


In this way of thinking, the proper and essential social role of merchants was to circulate wealth. Most Japanese did not express themselves in the metaphysical language of Confucian scholars, but they likewise regarded the free circulation of goods and currency as essential for social and economic health. Ordinary urban dwellers tended to distrust wealthy merchants and blame them for high prices. Therefore, many residents of Edo regarded the Ansei Earthquake as heaven-sent medicine to take money out of the hands of wealthy merchants and put it into the hands of laborers, shopkeepers, workers in the construction trades, and other ordinary people.

A print entitled Furidashi namazu-gusuri (Namazu powdered medicine pouches, Figure 6) (55) nicely illustrates this view. Furidashi was a general name for powdered medicine sold in pouches by itinerant ITINERANT. Travelling or taking a journey. In England there were formerly judges called Justices itinerant, who were sent with commissions into certain counties to try causes.  vendors and typically dissolved in hot water and quaffed like tea. A namazu is dressed as a medicine seller, but instead of the usual pouches of medicine, small figures representing some of the occupations that would benefit from the earthquake are stuck into his straw-tipped pole. The accompanying text explains in detail the efficacy of this namazu medicine for restoring economic health. It restores the flow and circulation of money collected in storehouses, restores warmth to the cold hearted, cures poverty, reduces laziness, and reduces the ill effects of luxurious living.

Chosha, kane no yamai (The metal disease of millionaires, Figure 7) (56) shifts the perspective to the recipient of the medicine. Kane can mean metal in general, money in general, or gold, depending on the context. Here both its meaning of metal (one of the five agents of yin and yang) and its meaning of money (especially gold coins) are relevant. A world-rectifying namazu forces a sick-looking rich man crouching next to his damaged storehouse to vomit vomit /vom·it/ (vom´it)
1. to eject stomach contents through the mouth.

2. matter expelled from the stomach by the mouth.
 gold coins. Nearby, two other wealthy men are excreting money. They are sick because of the metal that has accumulated within them, and the namazu is effecting a purgative cure. On a larger scale, the spending of the wealthy to rebuild their damaged homes, businesses, and storehouses released money into the ranks of the common people. Carpenters, plasterers, certain food vendors, building supplies vendors, and even ordinary porters enjoyed not only an upsurge in opportunities for work, but also a sharp increase in the wages they could command because labor was in such high demand. (57) While the earthquake may also have destroyed their own homes, these newly-rich commoners could afford to replace them, with money left over for luxuries.

[FIGURE 6 OMITTED]

[FIGURE 7 OMITTED]

"Big Black"

Just as some namazu-e cast the earthquake in the role of social medicine, so too did some newspapers speculate on the possible curative curative /cur·a·tive/ (kur´ah-tiv) tending to overcome disease and promote recovery.

cu·ra·tive
adj.
1. Serving or tending to cure.

2.
 powers of Perry's "black ships." For example, an article under the headline "Barbarian Steam Ships" (bankata jokisen) characterized the arrival of the black ships as the best possible medicine for society. It explained that the long period of peace has afflicted af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
 the warriors with an illness, making them ineffective and soft, but that recent events have refocused their energies on military affairs. Its opening words were a parody of a typical medicine seller's pitch, much like the Furidashi namazugusuri print discussed above. (58) The popular press often portrayed Perry's ships in a manner strikingly similar to the some of the menacing namazu images of 1855. For many, that the earthquake took place so soon after Perry's second visit and that it struck the bakufu's capital was too powerful a message to disregard as mere coincidence. The bakufu's long-standing prohibition of public commentary by the popular press on political issues did not actually stop such commentary. Instead, popular publications and prints employed veiling strategies such as allegories (mitate), plays on words, symbols with multiple meanings, and rebuses. Through such devices, Perry reappeared in Japan at the end of 1855 in some of the namazu-e.

Namazu-e depicting a world-rectifying namazu dispensing wealth commonly feature the deity of good fortune, Daikoku (or Daikokuten), as the one actually dishing out the money. (59) Daikoku's name means "Big Black." In some namazu-e, "Big Black," the deity, helps to rectify society. Of course, there was another "big black" on the minds of many of Edo's residents, namely the American steam ships. Namazu, too, always appeared black in the prints. So the deity Daikoku connected two other "big blacks" to himself: Perry's steam ships and the earthquake namazu. In O-Edo no furui (The shaking of greater Edo, Figure 8), (60) a giant namazu appears to have partially morphed into a whale. It is spouting spout·ing  
n. Chiefly Pennsylvania & New Jersey
See gutter. See Regional Note at gutter.


spouting
Noun

NZ
a.
 money, but not from a whale's blow hole. Instead, the coins spout from the same place that a smoke stack would be located on a steam ships, and the namazu resembles one of the black ships. Moreover, the text of an accompanying song includes a play on words play on words
Noun

same as pun
 that links the homonyms "great country" (daikoku) with "Big Black" (Daikoku). Standing on shore, people beckon beck·on  
v. beck·oned, beck·on·ing, beck·ons

v.tr.
1. To signal or summon, as by nodding or waving.

2.
 the whale-namazu-steamship to come closer. This print portrays Perry's visits and the trade likely to result from them in a generally favorable light.

Abe Yasunari, however, is not so sure. The short song reads "The soil of the great country moves, piling up a mountain of treasure in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of the city." "The soil of the great country" is daikoku no tsuchi, which is a homonym hom·o·nym  
n.
1. One of two or more words that have the same sound and often the same spelling but differ in meaning, such as bank (embankment) and bank (place where money is kept).

2.
a.
 for "the mallet of Daikoku." Why, Abe asks, have interpreters of namazu-e not at least considered taking the song at its face value, with Japan as the "great country?" The song is written in cursive script, angled into the spout of coins, and it is written upside down. The only way to read the song is to turn the print upside down (an arrow added to Figure 8 indicates the direction of the song text). Doing so reveals a different landscape. What was originally the oddly red sky looks like earth in the new perspective, and the spout of coins becomes a mountain of treasure. Furthermore, the whole scene now seems focused on "this" shore, that is, on Japan. Abe does not insist that the upside-down reading is the correct one, but rather that it reveals an additional possibility: that Japan might be or become wealthy and "great." Here, the term "great country" potentially refers both to the United States and to an optimistic op·ti·mist  
n.
1. One who usually expects a favorable outcome.

2. A believer in philosophical optimism.



op
 vision of Japan's future, each linked by the figure of Daikoku, the deity of wealth. (61) Further support for the possible reading of "great country" as Japan would be that the text of another print (Figure 10), one with no connection to the black ships or foreigners, begins with "The soil of the great country moves" (daikoku no tsuchi ...), a verbatim match with in the above song. (62)

A more explicit tension between Japan and the United States is evident in Ansei ni-nen jugatsu futsuka yoru daijishin namazu mondo mon·do   Slang
adj.
Enormous; huge: a mondo list of pizza toppings.

adv.
Extremely; very: a mondo big mistake.
 (An exchange with the namazu of the great earthquake, second year of Ansei, second day, tenth month, nighttime, Figure 9). (63) Here, Matthew Perry and the earthquake namazu engage in a neck-to-neck tug-of-war (kubi-hiki). Although there is no obvious victor, the namazu seems to be getting the upper hand as Perry lurches forward slightly and the referee points in the namazu's direction. Again we see a close connection in the popular imagination between Perry's expedition and the earthquake. Unlike the previous print, here the namazu and Perry are at political odds.

The namazu begins:
  You stupid Americans have been making fun of us Japanese for the past
  two or three years. You have come and pushed us around too much ...
  Stop this useless talk of trade; we don't need it. We are sick of
  hearing the noisy calls of the candy sellers. Since we don't need you,
  hurry up and put your back to us. Fix your rudder and sail away at
  once. (64)


[FIGURE 8 OMITTED]

[FIGURE 9 OMITTED]

Perry's reply emphasizes the ideals of his country's political and social organization: "What are you talking about, you stupid catfish! Mine is the country of benevolence BENEVOLENCE, duty. The doing a kind action to another, from mere good will, without any legal obligation. It is a moral duty only, and it cannot be enforced by law. A good wan is benevolent to the poor, but no law can compel him to be so.

BENEVOLENCE, English law.
 and compassion. No matter what a person does, even if he is a laborer or a hunter, if he is benevolent he can become king...." The possibility that commoners in the United States might even become head of state was fascinating to many Japanese at this time. The passage above ends with an admission by Perry of America's sole problem: a lack of sufficient food. It is for this reason that Perry has come to Japan seeking trade.

The namazu's response reiterates the view of America as a land characterized by its mode of government and contrasts it with Japan's distinctive quality:
  Shut up Perry. No matter how often you brag that your federation
  [gasshu koku] is a country of benevolence, if you don't have food you
  must be poor. If America had the Buddha or the gods, then you would
  have a good harvest of the five grains. But since you don't, you have
  to depend on piracy and steal your food. Knowing this, the gods of our
  country have gathered together and have caused a divine wind to blow
  and sink your ships and those of the Russians. (65) For sure in the
  eleventh month of last year the gods struck out against your
  rudeness....


Here we see a clear conception of Japan as a land characterized by the presence of benevolent deities, with the Ansei Earthquake being an attempt by these deities to shake off the foreign presence. Abe points out that just as some namazu-e portrayed the Kashima deity as inadequate to deal with the current crisis and thus in need of augmentation AUGMENTATION, old English law. The name of a court erected by Henry VIII., which was invested with the power of determining suits and controversies relating to monasteries and abbey lands.  from outside deities, here too is a similar view. The only force that might balance the power of Perry and the new foreigners was the collective body of the deities of Japan. Significantly, the dialogue has extended the Ansei Earthquake in Edo to encompass all of Japan, as several other namazu-e have done. (66) The imagined community "Japan" was beginning to emerge in the popular imagination of Edo, and it was divine.

Perry responds by invoking the American spirit: "You catfish! It is funny for you to speak like that, making up your own reasoning. Despite the fact that men can usually hold you down with a gourd gourd (gôrd, grd), common name for some members of the Cucurbitaceae, a family of plants whose range includes all tropical and subtropical areas and extends into the temperate zones. , on the fourth day of the eleventh month you tried to send us away by shaking Shimazu and Numazu, but our American spirit remained unmoved un·moved  
adj.
Emotionally unaffected.


unmoved
Adjective

not affected by emotion; indifferent

Adj. 1.
." In this way, the dialogue articulates a clear contrast between an American spirit, manifest as a relatively egalitarian, merit-based society, and the community of Japan, blessed by an array of benevolent deities. It may be significant that there is no mention here of government in Japan. The implied contrast is thus between an aggressive America with an effective government and a Japan, whose government is not effective and whose people must therefore turn to the deities. This dialogue adumbrated both the idea of Japan as a community extending beyond Edo and the need of this community for divine intervention. Faint outlines of what will become the Meiji Restoration and, slightly later, popular consciousness of Japan as a divinely-authorized nation have emerged from the wreckage of post-earthquake Edo.

The print, however, stops well short of advocating any further shakeup shake·up  
n.
A thorough, often drastic reorganization, as of the personnel in a business or government.

Noun 1. shakeup
 of society. The referee, a plasterer, gets in the last words Last words are a person's final words before death. For a list of well known last words, see or use the link at right.

Last words may refer to:
  • Last Words, an Australian punk band (late 1970s - early 1980s)
:
  Both of you be quiet ... look with your eyes and see the cracks in the
  warehouses. We are asked to patch up these cracks and holes, asked
  over and over again; we are asked to prop up the broken down walls; we
  are known for our fine work with the trowel. Everyone admires our
  work. We are thankful this time for the earthquake, but both of you
  try to resolve your differences without causing us any more trouble.
  We don't want to see it; stop it!


The plasterer's view here was probably typical of many Edo laborers. For the most part, they were happy with the immediate post-earthquake situation, although the process of arriving at that point had been tumultuous, terrifying, and, for some, deadly. So, while thankful for the recent earthquake, these residents of Edo hoped for an end to major upheavals in the near future. We know from hindsight, of course, that the wheels of change were just starting to turn.

Broader Significance of the Earthquake and the Namazu-e

A remarkable coincidence between geology, geography, and politics magnified the psychological impact of the earthquake, making it appear as a direct attack on the heart of the bakufu. The damage was not uniformly distributed. Some areas suffered severe devastation and loss of life, while other parts of the city came through the ordeal with nearly all buildings and people shaken but intact. The damage was less a function of proximity to the epicenter than it was a function of topography. The Yamanote Tablelands, an extension of the Musashino Plateau, wound their way through parts of the heart of Edo, constituting modest upland areas. These upland areas were not always obvious because of erosion and past filling with soil or debris of low lying areas. In 1590, when Tokugawa Ieyasu Tokugawa Ieyasu

(born Jan. 31, 1543, Okazaki, Japan—died June 1, 1616, Sumpu) Founder of the Tokugawa shogunate (see Tokugawa period) and ruler of Japan (1603–16).
 (1542-1616) made the fishing village of Edo his base of operations Noun 1. base of operations - installation from which a military force initiates operations; "the attack wiped out our forward bases"
base

air base, air station - a base for military aircraft

army base - a large base of operations for an army
, engineers and construction workers began to reclaim the marshy marsh·y  
adj. marsh·i·er, marsh·i·est
1. Of, resembling, or characterized by a marsh or marshes; boggy.

2. Growing in marshes.
 tidal flats tidal flat

Level muddy surface bordering an estuary, alternately submerged and exposed to the air by changing tidal levels. In addition to the alternating submergence and exposure, the varying influences of fresh river water and salty marine waters cause physical conditions
 around Edo Castle. This process accelerated rapidly during the early seventeenth century, after Edo had become the de facto political capital of Japan. Edo Castle itself was on natural high ground, but much of the prime real estate around the castle was land that had been part of a river drainage basin drainage basin: see catchment area.  or the bay two or three centuries earlier--only yesterday in geological time.

When the earthquake struck, it shook the whole city, but structures on the firm foundation of the uplands generally fared rather well. The severe damage was in low lying areas, especially areas of land reclaimed from swamps and waterways The list of waterways is a link page for any river, canal, estuary or firth.
International waterways
  • Danish straits
  • Great Belt
  • Oresund
  • Bosporus
  • Dardanelles
. As fate would have it "As Fate Would Have It" is an episode of the science fiction television series The 4400. Synopsis
NTAC offers Jordan Collier protection when Maia has a morbid premonition.
, the most prominent neighborhood of samurai residences, home to the bakufu's closest allies among the domain lords, leading bakufu officials, and several key bakufu offices, was located at a place that during the sixteenth century had been the Hibiya Inlet of Edo Bay. The Wadakura Gate, for example, one of the approaches to Edo Castle, had once been the site of an underwater storehouse. Adjacent to this gate was the mansion of the lord of Aizu, charged with construction and management of the number two offshore artillery battery. The earthquake spared no part of the Aizu complex, and the stores of potassium nitrate potassium nitrate, chemical compound, KNO3, occurring as colorless, prismatic crystals or as a white powder; it is found pure in nature as the mineral saltpeter, or niter. (The name saltpeter is also applied to sodium nitrate, although less frequently.  and other explosives accumulated there made the inevitable fires all the more spectacular in their destructive fury. The same fate befell Aizu's neighbor, in charge of the number three battery, and most of the other denizens of this elite neighborhood. In short, the earthquake launched a direct attack on the government. Moving one residential zone further out from the castle, the area adjacent to the elite neighborhood was home to commoners. Built on an eroded but sturdy tableland base, it suffered only moderate damage and stood in stark contrast to the elite collapse. The bakufu's expensive offshore artillery batteries also happened to be built on a foundation of flimsy soil, and their complete destruction rendered Edo defenseless against intimidation by steam-powered naval vessels. In the eyes of commoners and elites alike, the cosmic forces made a strong statement that night. (67)

Given that the earthquake itself was an event fraught with political significance, it is hardly surprising that the bakufu would have been uneasy about Edo's residents discussing it through the medium of namazu-e. The bakufu, however, had more pressing concerns during the earthquake's immediate aftermath than popular media production. In the early days of the twelfth month, bakufu officials began actively seeking to ban the production of namazu-e. The publishing guild (toiya) was reluctant to enforce a ban on such a profitable product, and tried various delaying strategies. Nevertheless, increasingly severe bakufu intimidation, including briefly jailing nine guild officials, led to the destruction of all namazu-e printing blocks on the fourteenth day. The namazu-e had been in production for about two months. (68)

Abe points out that the key to understanding the bakufu's forceful ban is realizing that namazu-e were not frivolous amusements or even simply a "reflection" of prevailing conditions. Instead, they were the medium by which the common people of Edo actively articulated alternative visions of society, several of which we have seen in the preceding discussion. None of the prints explicitly criticized the bakufu, but they expressed doubts regarding the viability of prevailing political and social arrangements and suggested, albeit vaguely, alternatives for which people might yearn. (69)

Especially significant for subsequent developments in Japan was the emergence of what we might call proto-nationalism at the popular level in Edo. Japan at this time was a patchwork of over two hundred fifty different governments, with marked regional differences. It was not a centralized state, nor did all of its inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
 share a common culture. Social elites, regardless of geographical origin, usually did identify with a larger entity of "Japan" to some degree, but most ordinary people lacked a self-conscious Japanese identity. Their identities were primarily local, even though travel and information networks permitted an awareness of places far from their own homes. (70) Tokugawa Japan was not a modern nation in the sense of the term popularized by scholars such as E. J. Hobsbawm, Ernest Gellner, and Benedict Anderson Benedict Richard O'Gorman Anderson (born August 261936 in Kunming, China) is a scholar of nationalism and international studies. Biography
Anderson was born in Kunming, China, to an Anglo-Irish father and English mother.
. (71) Some of the infrastructure needed to create a modern nation, such a transportation networks, newspapers, and sufficient literacy to read them, existed in some places, but other key elements such as school systems and a centralized state were missing. The pressing task of the new Meiji government after establishing basic institutions of state during the 1870s was to "make Japanese," (72) that is, to instill in·still
v.
To pour in drop by drop.



instil·lation n.
 in Japan's population a self-conscious national identity. Accomplishing this task took only one generation, even though it did not produce a unified agreement on precisely what Japanese identity entailed. (73) The stimulation of proto-nationalism in Edo owing to the Ansei Earthquake was one contributing factor to the speed and success of this later undertaking.

The most important elements in this proto-nationalism were an emerging cognizance The power, authority, and ability of a judge to determine a particular legal matter. A judge's decision to take note of or deal with a cause.

That which is cognizable to a judge is within the scope of his or her jurisdiction.
 among Edo's common people that their lives were linked in significant ways with people who lived elsewhere in the Japanese islands and the recognition of Amaterasu as the ultimate representative of this imagined community among the deities. One talismanic namazu-e, (74) for example, features four namazu in the foreground, each with north, south, east, or west written on its robes. The four directions, along with the presence of the deities of earth and water (wells), emphasize the broad geographic scope of the earthquake's impact. Amaterasu is in charge of the situation (with an embarrassed-looking Kashima assisting) and declares that he is foremost among the deities of Great Japan. The namazu subsequently swear an oath to protect all of Japan.

In addition to the prints we have previously examined, several others explicitly describe the earthquake's impact as "echoing throughout Japan" (Nippon e hibiki) or otherwise having and impact on Japan, not Edo. They also associate Amaterasu explicitly with this entity called Japan. Kashima is certainly a key player, even in most prints featuring Amaterasu, but Kashima's authority is regional in scope, inadequate to deal with the Japan-wide problem of the day. (75) Yet another print features Tento, whose head is the sun. Tento is a term meaning both "sun" and "heavenly way," and is a synonym synonym (sĭn`ənĭm) [Gr.,=having the same name], word having a meaning that is the same as or very similar to the meaning of another word of the same language. Some are alike in some meanings only, as live and dwell.  for Amaterasu in this print. A crowd has gathered, some of whom worship Tento. Others attack Kashima with their fists and push over the foundation stone. (76) This example is atypical in its extreme portrayal of violence toward Kashima, but the key point is that it and numerous other namazu-e we have examined indicate an emerging consciousness of Japan as a natural community, a recognition of Amaterasu as its head, and, to varying degrees, an acknowledgement of at least the possibility of radical, even violent change.

M. William Steele For other persons named William Steele, see William Steele (disambiguation).
William Steele (d. 1680), Lord Chancellor of Ireland, was a son of Richard Steele of Sandbach, Cheshire, and was educated at Caius College, Cambridge.
 has described what he calls "a sort of commoner nationalism" in the popular press accounts of Perry's extended stay in Japan in the spring of 1854. They typically portrayed the Americans in crude terms, showing them succumbing to the superior power of the people or the deities of "Japan." Furthermore, Perry's visit inspired graphic renditions of world maps, with Japan at the center. (77) The namazu-e, therefore, were not the earliest manifestation of proto-nationalism among Edo's population. They do, however, adumbrate ad·um·brate  
tr.v. ad·um·brat·ed, ad·um·brat·ing, ad·um·brates
1. To give a sketchy outline of.

2. To prefigure indistinctly; foreshadow.

3. To disclose partially or guardedly.

4.
 a generally more sophisticated view of the emerging imagined community than the prints Steele describes. Abe characterizes the image of Japan that emerged in the namazu-e by using an ancient East Asian metaphor for the political community, the tripod vessel. The namazu-e that deal with national images express a triumvirate Triumvirate (trīŭm`vĭrĭt, –vĭrāt'), in ancient Rome, ruling board or commission of three men. Triumvirates were common in the Roman republic.  of national soil (kokudo), that is, the physical territory of Japan, the national deities (kokushin), and the national sovereign (kimi), whose precise identity is never stated. These three elements are the legs of the tripod. (78)

Following Abe and Steele we find that by the end of 1855, many residents of Edo thought of Japan in terms of specific territory, albeit with imprecise im·pre·cise  
adj.
Not precise.



impre·cisely adv.
 boundaries in the north and south. A geographical sense of Japanese identity appeared frequently in the press reports of 1854. The namazu-e add to this geographic view a nuanced portrayal of the relationship among the land, the people, and the deities. They presage many of the themes that the new Meiji state would soon emphasize and further develop. That such a vision of Japan was already present among the people of Edo was undoubtedly a boon for the new imperial government in its bid to establish itself in a city that owed its very existence to the Tokugawa bakufu. (79) The Meiji state would expend ex·pend  
tr.v. ex·pend·ed, ex·pend·ing, ex·pends
1. To lay out; spend: expending tax revenues on government operations. See Synonyms at spend.

2.
 much effort to inculcate in·cul·cate  
tr.v. in·cul·cat·ed, in·cul·cat·ing, in·cul·cates
1. To impress (something) upon the mind of another by frequent instruction or repetition; instill: inculcating sound principles.
 an emperor-centered national consciousness in many other cities and in the countryside during the late nineteenth century, but the process got a head start in the capital, owing in large part to the Ansei Earthquake. That head start, however, did not include a strong consciousness of the emperor as an earthly political ruler. The linkage between Amaterasu and the emperor in the namazu-e ranges from vague to nonexistent non·ex·is·tence  
n.
1. The condition of not existing.

2. Something that does not exist.



non
. Indeed, it is probably significant that many namazu-e speak of an earthly ruler (kimi) but give no concrete indication who that ruler may be (except for one, which mentions the emperor, shogun, and domain lords all together). As Abe points out, imagining a Japanese identity in which the political ruler was an unspecified abstraction was surely appropriate in post-earthquake 1855. (80)

There is one final point to consider regarding the political significance of the Ansei Earthquake and namazu-e. That the earthquake was a blow to bakufu finances, power, and prestige in 1855 should now be clear. It is also possible that this event entered popular memory and exerted a significant destabilizing effect twelve years later, in 1867, the year the bakufu actually collapsed. The print Kashima osore (Kashima fear, Figure 10) (81) portrays people dancing around a namazu dressed as an itinerant representative of the Kashima shrine. These representatives would wander the countryside each spring to encourage quasi-religious dancing in anticipation of the start of the agricultural cycle The Agricultural cycle refers to the annual activitites related to the growth and harvest of a crop.

This includes loosening the soil, seeding, special watering, moving plants when they grow bigger, and harvesting, among other activities.
 (Kashima odori or Kashima kotofure). Six men and a boy dance around the namazu in a state of apparent rapture. The namazu is holding a pole with a solar disk at its top. A rabbit in a disk would ordinarily signify the moon in East Asia, but the color of this disk is red, and 1855 was the year of the rabbit This article is about the band. For the Chinese Zodiac animal, see Rabbit (zodiac).

Year of the Rabbit is a rock band assembled and fronted by Ken Andrews, formerly of Failure and ON.
. It was also the okage-doshi, the one year in twelve when people traditionally made pilgrimages (okagemairi) to the Ise Shrine (Amaterasu) in large numbers. (82) These pilgrimages often featured frenzied dancing, carousing ca·rouse  
intr.v. ca·roused, ca·rous·ing, ca·rous·es
1. To engage in boisterous, drunken merrymaking.

2. To drink excessively.

n.
Carousal.
, drinking, and other elements of a carnival-like atmosphere.

[FIGURE 10 OMITTED]

George M. Wilson has analyzed the years leading up to the Meiji Restoration using a structuralist framework that plots simultaneous narratives for four different groups: commoners, samurai imperial loyalists Loyalists, in the American Revolution, colonials who adhered to the British cause. The patriots referred to them as Tories. Although Loyalists were found in all social classes and occupations, a disproportionately large number were engaged in commerce and the  (advocates of "expelling ex·pel  
tr.v. ex·pelled, ex·pel·ling, ex·pels
1. To force or drive out: expel an invader.

2.
 the barbarians"), bakufu and domain officials, and foreign envoys. His approach stresses the motives and self interests of each group, and allows us rather easily to see convergences and clashes between the groups in a way that usefully eschews traditional cause and effect explanations for these inter-group interactions. Wilson is especially concerned with acknowledging the significant role played by ordinary people in the Meiji Restoration, as the interests of groups of commoners seeking world rectification converged briefly ca. 1866-1868 with samurai loyalists seeking roughly the same outcome of redeeming society. Wilson has much to say about the widespread, "orgiastic or·gi·as·tic  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of an orgy.

2. Arousing or causing unrestrained emotion; frenzied.
" ee ja nai ka dancing that broke out in many parts of central Japan toward the end of 1867 and lingered into 1868, sparked by rumors of paper charms falling from the sky. The dancing functioned, among other things, dramatically to display the breakdown of the old order and the yearning of the common people for reform. (83)

Ee ja nai ka dancing was centered in Kyoto, although it took place across a wide range of towns, cities, and rural villages. It did not take place in Edo, which by this time had suffered severe population decline and economic depression owing to repeated natural disasters and epidemics and because the bakufu eliminated samurai alternate attendance in 1862. (84) Like Wilson, Noguchi stresses the political significance of the ee ja nai ka dancing. He also points to a variety of fragmentary frag·men·tar·y  
adj.
Consisting of small, disconnected parts: a picture that emerges from fragmentary information.



frag
 evidence indicating that at least some of the dancers in 1867 were cognizant that during the previous okage-doshi, a world rectifying earthquake shook Edo. A song ditty dit·ty  
n. pl. dit·ties
A simple song.



[Middle English dite, a literary composition, from Old French dite, from Latin dict
, for example, playing on the homonyms "self" and "earthquake," points out that twelve years ago an earthquake (jishin) half destroyed the military houses, and that this year, the military houses will complete that task by themselves (jishin). Noguchi points out that the conviction on the part of many people that this okage year (1867) would again feature momentous change on a par with the 1855 earthquake became in part a self-fulfilling prophecy self-fulfilling prophecy, a concept developed by Robert K. Merton to explain how a belief or expectation, whether correct or not, affects the outcome of a situation or the way a person (or group) will behave. . (85) Abe also discusses similarities in the rhetoric and themes of some of the namazu-e and the songs of the ee ja nai kai dancers. (86)

The reverberations of the Ansei Earthquake of 1855 continued long after the earth stopped shaking. The event functioned as a catalyst for growing doubts about the bakufu's ability to govern, doubts that had first emerged in the wake of Perry's visits. It also catalyzed among the common people of Edo an emerging vision of Japan as a natural political community blessed by the deities. The namazu-e were the means by which the common people adumbrated this new vision. Abe characterizes the prints as a handy, cheap, disposable tool for helping to create Japan as a nation. (87) I agree with this characterization but would also highlight the high degree of linguistic and visual sophistication so·phis·ti·cate  
v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates

v.tr.
1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly.

2.
 evident in many of these prints. Namazu-e constituted a powerful form of political rhetoric for a group theoretically forbidden from engaging in political discourse. Edo was in temporary decline at the time the bakufu collapsed, and its residents were on the political sidelines. Owing in large part to the role of the namazu-e in defining the 1855 earthquake as a world rectifying event in popular memory, it was able to inspire acts of political protest and subversion by thousands of frenzied dancers in Kyoto and throughout wide areas of central Japan twelve years later. The anonymous print makers of Edo posited that the earthquake under their city had shaken up all of Japan, and they were right.

Department of History and Religious Studies

University Park, PA 16802

ENDNOTES

University of Washington research scientist Ruth Ludwin provided helpful comments on an earlier draft of this article. Discussions with her about the intersection of earthquakes and culture in 2004 led to my current interest in the social history of earthquakes in Japan. This article also benefited from the astute comments of an anonymous reader and from a faculty research grant from the Institute for the Arts and Humanities at Penn State University.

1. The full, quasi-official name for this earthquake in many English-language publications is the Ansei Tokyo Earthquake (Ansei Tokyo jishin), even though Edo was never called Tokyo until 1868. For this reason most Japanese scholars call it the Ansei Edo Earthquake (Ansei Edo jishin) or simply the Ansei Earthquake (Ansei jishin), and it occasionally appears as the Great Ansei Earthquake (Ansei dai-jishin). Ansei is an imperial reign name (nengo) and refers to the period 1854-1859. There were several other major earthquakes during the Ansei era, each distinguished by a different place name. The newspapers of the time described the details of the Ansei Earthquake. Reproductions and summaries of these newspaper accounts are available in the many Japanese works dealing with the popular press during the Tokugawa period (1603-1867). See, for example, Inagaki Fumio, ed., Edo no taihen: jishin, kaminari, kaji, kaibutsu (Pivotal events in Edo: earthquakes, lightning, fires, and monsters) (Tokyo, 1995), p. 64; and Kitahara Itoko, "Ansei dai-jishin" (The Great Ansei Earthquake) in Kinoshita Naoyuki and Yoshimi Shunya, eds., Nyusu no tanjo: kawaraban to shinbun nishiki-e no johosekai (Birth of the news: the information world of the popular press and visual images) (Tokyo, 1999), pp. 154-155. Regarding the number of buildings destroyed, see also Susan B. Hanley, Everyday Things in Premodern pre·mod·ern  
adj.
Existing or coming before a modern period or time: the feudal system of premodern Japan. 
 Japan: The Hidden Legacy of Material Culture (Berkeley, 1997), p. 24. For a detailed geological account of the earthquake and the damage it caused, see Usami Tatsuo, Nihon higai jishin soran, [416]-2001 (Materials for a comprehensive list of destructive earthquakes in Japan, [416]-2001) (Tokyo, 2003), pp. 171-182. For comprehensive social histories of the earthquake, see Kitahara Itoko, Jishin no shakaishi: Ansei dai-jishin to minshu (The social history of an earthquake: the Great Ansei Earthquake and the people) (Tokyo, 2000); and Noguchi Takehiko, Ansei Edo jishin: saigai to seiji kenryoku (The Ansei Edo Earthquake: calamity and political authority) (Tokyo, 1997).

2. Konta Yozo, "Bakumatsu masu-media joho" (Bakumatsu-era mass media information) in Miyata Noboru Noboru Miyata (宮田登 Miyata Noboru  and Takada Mamoru, eds., Namazu-e: Jishin to Nihon bunka (Catfish picture prints: earthquakes and Japanese culture) (Tokyo, 1995), pp. 77-78.

3. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, pp. 11-12.

4. Namazu-e and Their Themes: An Interpretative in·ter·pre·ta·tive  
adj.
Variant of interpretive.



in·terpre·ta
 Approach to Some Aspects of Japanese Folk Religion (Leiden, Netherlands, 1964). This study has relatively little to say about the namazu-e themselves and is instead a thick description of the matrix of folk beliefs in which the namazu-e were embedded Inserted into. See embedded system. .

5. Some of H.D. Harootunian's extensive work on the Bakumatsu era (ca. 1830-1867) examines events from the standpoint of ordinary urban dwellers. See, for example, "Late Tokugawa Thought and Culture" in Marius B. Jansen, ed., The Cambridge History of Japan: Volume 5, The Nineteenth Century (New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, 1989), esp. pp. 168-182. George M. Wilson has argued forcefully for the importance of including ordinary people in any account of the events leading up to the Meiji Restoration, and he outlines a method for doing so in Patriots and Redeemers The "Redeemers" were a political coalition in the Southern United States during the Reconstruction era, who sought to overthrow the Radical Republican coalition of Freedmen, carpetbaggers and Scalawags.  in Japan: Motives in the Meiji Restoration (Chicago, 1982). Thomas Keirstead and Deidre Lynch have raised the possibility of alternative views of the end of the Tokugawa bakufu, in part by looking at events through the eyes of ordinary city dwellers. See "Eijanaika: Japanese Modernization and the Carnival of Time" in Robert A. Rosenstone, ed., Revisioning History: Film and the Construction of a New Past (Princeton, NJ, 1995), pp. 64-76. M. William Steele has examined Bakumatsu Japan through the eyes of various commoner groups, including urban dwellers. See Alternative Narratives in Modern Japanese History (New York, 2003).

6. Kitahara points out that the term yonaoshi first appeared in connection with earthquakes after an earthquake and tsunami disrupted commerce between Edo and Osaka during the second month of 1853. At that time, people chanted "yonaoshi" as an incantation incantation, set formula, spoken or sung, for the purpose of working magic. An incantation is normally an invocation to beneficent supernatural spirits for aid, protection, or inspiration. It may also serve as a charm or spell to ward off the effects of evil spirits.  to ward off further shaking. By late 1855, the term's meaning had expanded to indicate an active desire for the rectification of society. Jishin no shakaishi, pp. 98-99.

7. Harold Bolitho, "The Tempo Crisis" in Marius B. Jansen, ed., The Cambridge History of Japan: Volume 5, The Nineteenth Century (New York, 1989), pp. 120-121; and Conrad Totman, Early Modern Japan (Berkeley, 1993), pp. 442-445.

8. Wilson, Patriots and Redeemers. More specifically, Wilson argues that a quest for Verb 1. quest for - go in search of or hunt for; "pursue a hobby"
quest after, go after, pursue

look for, search, seek - try to locate or discover, or try to establish the existence of; "The police are searching for clues"; "They are searching for the
 redemption motivated two key groups in bakumatsu Japan: activists among the common people and samurai imperial loyalists. Although these two groups quickly became antagonists antagonists,
n muscles that counterbalance agonists during specific movements.

opioid Neurology A pain-attenuating peptide that occurs naturally in the brain, which induces analgesia by mimicking endogenous opioids at opioid
 after the Meiji Restoration, their dreams of world renewal and redemption briefly complemented each other to help bring about the bakufu's downfall.

9. Gerald Groemer, "Singing the News: Yomiuri in Japan during the Edo and Meiji Periods Meiji period

(1868–1912) Period in Japanese history beginning with the enthronment of the Meiji emperor and ending with his death. It was a time of rapid modernization and westernization.
," Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Vol. 54, No. 1 (June, 1994): 245.

10. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, pp. 18, 43-44, 63-64; and Abe Yasunari, "Namazu-e no ue no Amaterasu" (Amaterasu in the namazu-e), Shiso, no. 912 (June, 2000): 25-52.

11. The seminal study of Tokugawa-period foreign relations is Ronald Toby, State and Diplomacy in Early Modern Japan: Asia in the Development of the Tokugawa Bakufu (Princeton, NJ, 1984). There is now a substantial literature in English and Japanese on Tokugawa-period foreign relations.

12. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, p. 64

13. The print was Ukiyo Matabei meiga kitoku (The miracle of famous paintings by Ukiyo Matabei) by Utagawa Kuniyoshi. According to Sarah E. Thompson: "The legendary painter Ukiyo Matabei (1578-1680), is shown making folk paintings of the type called otsu-e, a forerunner of ukiyo-e. The paintings have come to life, leaving only shadowy outlines on the paper, and dance around the painter in a cloud;... The word kan concealed in the pattern of the falconer's left sleeve was interpreted as a reference to the irritable temperament (kanshaku) of the shogun. The other figures were identified with the various advisers surrounding [the shogun] Iesada, and the whole was seen as a vaguely derogatory de·rog·a·to·ry  
adj.
1. Disparaging; belittling: a derogatory comment.

2. Tending to detract or diminish.
 reference to the new governing powers. Kuniyoshi and his publisher were fined." "The Politics of Japanese Prints," in Sarah E. Thompson and H.D. Harootunian, Undercurrents Undercurrents is:
  • Undercurrents (Music, Art & Event Marketing & Promotion Network), a network of regions promoting music, art and events.
  • Undercurrents
 of the Floating World: Censorship and Japanese Prints (New York, 1991), p. 83.

14. Kitani Makoto, "Kurobune to jishin-namazu: namazu-e no fudo to jidai" ([Perry's] black ships and the earthquake namazu: the customs and temporal context of namazu-e) in Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 56-57. By the nineteenth century, the image of pinning down a catfish with a gourd had become a well-known metaphor for accomplishing something so difficult as to seem impossible. In some contexts, it might also highlight the magic power of bottle-gourds. The earliest painting depicting an attempt to pin down a catfish with a gourd is Josetsu's ca. 1413 Hyonenzu (Illustration of catfish and gourd). For a thorough, revisionist re·vi·sion·ism  
n.
1. Advocacy of the revision of an accepted, usually long-standing view, theory, or doctrine, especially a revision of historical events and movements.

2.
 analysis of its context, meaning, and iconography, see Shimao Arata, Josetsu-hitsu Hyonenzu: Hyotan namazu no ikonorojii (Josetsu's Hyonenzu: the iconology i·co·nol·o·gy  
n.
The branch of art history that deals with the description, analysis, and interpretation of icons or iconic representations.



i·con
 of the gourd catfish) (Tokyo, 1996).

15. For the geological details of this earthquake, see Usami, Jishin soran, pp. 131-132.

16. Quoted in Bolitho, "Tempo Crisis," p. 117.

17. Sarah E. Thompson points out that during the Tokugawa period, "Any mention of current news events, especially those of a sensational nature, was prohibited.... There was also the possibility for implied criticism of the government in the reporting of current events, especially given the ancient notion, imported from China, that a truly virtuous regime would be so completely uneventful that even natural disasters would not occur. The suppression of news reporting may have been due in part to a desire to suggest this ideal condition." Thompson, "Politics of Japanese Prints," p. 34.

18. Kitahara has analyzed news networks in much of her work on the popular press. See, for example, "Ansei dai-jishin," especially the graphic on p. 157, and Kitahara Itoko, "Saigai to kawaraban: sono rekishitekitenkai" (Natural disasters and the popular press: their historical development) in Kinoshita Naoyuki and Yoshimi Shunya, Nyusu no tanjo, pp. 25-43. Konta has also analyzed these networks in "Bakumatsu masu-media joho," as has Groemer, "Singing the News." See also Steele's chapter "Goemon's New World View" in Alternative Narratives, pp. 4-18.

19. For the geological data and a detailed breakdown of death, injury, and destruction throughout the area affected by the earthquake, see Usami, Jishin soran, pp. 137-144. For a discussion of the significance of the Zenkoji Earthquake in the development of information networks, see Kitahara, Jishin no shakaishi, pp. 94-97.

20. Nishimaki Kozaburo, ed., Kawaraban, shinbun: Edo, Meiji sanbyakunen jiken I (Kawaraban and modern newspapers: 300 events from the Edo and Meiji periods, vol. 1) (Tokyo, 1978), p. 126.

21. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, p. 18.

22. Nishimaki, Kawaraban, p. 140; and Kitahara "Saigai to kawaraban," p. 32. The stated death toll of 3,780 seems high, even considering the fires. Usami's data puts the number of dead and seriously injured at 2,152. Property damage, however, was severe and extensive. Usami, Jishin soran, pp. 146-148.

23. Kitahara, "Saigai to kawaraban," p. 33; and Usami, Jishin soran, pp. 148-151.

24. For accounts from the popular press, see Inagaki, Edo no taihen, pp. 60-61; and Kitahara "Saigai to kawaraban," pp. 34-37. For the geological details of these earthquakes and the tsunamis resulting form them, see Usami, Jishin soran, pp. 151-168; and Watanabe Hideo, Nihon higai tsunami soran, dai-ni han (A comprehensive listing of tsunamis striking Japan, second edition) (Tokyo, 1998), pp. 91-97.

25. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, p. 39.

26. Wakamizu Suguru, Namazu wa odoru: Edo no namazu-e omoshiro bunseki (Catfish dance: a distinctive analysis of namazu-e) (Tokyo, 2003), pp. 16-17.

27. Kitahara, "Saigai to kawaraban," pp. 32-33.

28. #134, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 10-11, 322-324. Because Miyata and Takada have gathered nearly all extant namazu-e into a single volume, I follow Abe Yasunari's practice of indicating specific namazu-e by their number in that volume.

29. #84, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 296-297; and Abe, "Amaterasu," pp. 42-43.

30. Wakamizu, Namazu wa odoru, p. 17.

31. Mitaya Noboru, "Toshi minzokugaku kara mita namazu shinko" (The development of namazu belief as seen from the perspective of urban ethnology ethnology (ĕthnŏl`əjē), scientific study of the origin and functioning of human cultures. It is usually considered one of the major branches of cultural anthropology, the other two being anthropological archaeology and ) in Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 29-30. In many Japanese accounts, dragons and namazu were interchangeable, and sometimes we find an image of a dragon with accompanying text that refers to it as a "namazu." For details on when and how this dragon-namazu equivalency equivalency

the combining power of an electrolyte. See also equivalent.
 developed, see Shimao, Hyonenzu, pp. 66-81.

32. Miyata, "Toshi minzokugaku," pp. 30-31; and Kitani, "Kurobune to jishin-namazu," pp. 52-55.

33. Kuroda Hideo, O no karada; o no shozo (The body of the king, the image of the king), (Tokyo, 1993), pp. 160-161.

34. Kitahara, "Ansei dai-jishin," p. 163.

35. #37, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 110, 262.

36. Big Dipper belief (hokuto shinko) came into Japan as part of early popular Daoism, circa the Heian period Heian period

(794–1185) Period of Japanese history named for the capital city of Heian-kyo (Kyoto). It is known mainly for the flourishing culture of the court aristocracy, which devoted itself to the pursuit of aesthetic refinement as displayed in poetry and
 (794-1185). The basic belief is that the stars are deities, the most important of which are the Pole Star and the Big Dipper constellation. This star-related belief also came to be associated with wish-granting spirit writing talismans (chintaku reifu shinko). See Omori Takashi, ed., Dokyo no hon: furofushi o mezasu sendo-shukujutsu no sekai (Daoism book: the world of esoteric techniques aimed at attaining youth and immortality immortality, attribute of deathlessness ascribed to the soul in many religions and philosophies. Forthright belief in immortality of the body is rare. Immortality of the soul is a cardinal tenet of Islam and is held generally in Judaism, although it is not an ) (Tokyo, 1991, 1997), pp. 164-171.

37. Kitani Makoto, "Namazu-e to yakuharai" in Tsuchiura shiritsu hakubutsukan (Tsuchiura City Museum), ed., Namazu-e kenbunroku: O-Edo bakumatsu namazu-e jijo (The record and circumstances of namazu-e in Edo of the bakumatsu period) (Tsuchiura, Japan, 1999), pp. 41-42, 46-48.

38. #44, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 106, 266.

39. In this capacity, Ebisu was acting as a rusu(i)gami, that is, a caretaker deity who stands in for the main deity of a place. This need for a substitute arises from the belief that all the major deities travel to Izumo for a meeting that takes place during the tenth lunar month lunar month
n.
The average time between successive new or full moons, equal to 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes. Also called synodic month.
. This month is known as kannazuki or kaminazuki--"the month without deities." Although often depicted as good-natured, Ebisu's origins are complex and contain a dark side that can manifest itself in certain circumstances. For a detailed explanation of these matters, see Ouwehand, Namazu-e, pp. 16, 82-85.

40. Wakamizu, Namazu wa odoru, pp. 70.

41. T. Fujitani, Splendid Monarchy: Power and Pageantry in Modern Japan (Berkeley, 1996), pp. 1-9.

42. #30, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 112, 257. #31, pp. 112, 258 is very similar.

43. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, p. 194; and Abe, "Amaterasu," pp. 37-38.

44. For a trenchant analysis of the ei ja nai ka phenomenon, see Wilson, Patriots and Redeemers, esp. pp. 95-121.

45. #29, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, p. 257. For analysis of this image, see Abe, "Amaterasu," p. 40.

46. #32, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 258-60.

47. Abe, "Amaterasu," pp. 41-42.

48. This point is one of Abe's main arguments in "Amaterasu." Abe takes issue with most other scholars of namazu-e regarding their emphasis. While not denying the importance of the theme of the earthquake as a world rectification (yonaoshi) event in many prints, he says that an excessive focus on this point has prevented adequate treatment of other, equally important themes.

49. #48, also called "Namazu e no korashime" because the print itself has no title. Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 268-269.

50. #62, Takada and Miyata, Namazu-e, pp. 18-19, 278-280.

51. Wakamizu, Namazu wa odoru, pp. 62-65; and Takada and Miyata, Namazu-e, pp. 278-280.

52. See, for example, #110 and 111, Takada and Miyata, Namazu-e, p. 138, 311-312.

53. Yamaga Soko gorui (Classified statements of Yamaga Soko), Tahara Tsuguo and Morimoto Jun'ichiro, eds., Yamaga Soko, Nihon shiso taikei (Great compendium com·pen·di·um  
n. pl. com·pen·di·ums or com·pen·di·a
1. A short, complete summary; an abstract.

2. A list or collection of various items.
 of Japanese thought series) 32 (Tokyo, 1970), p. 152.

54. Kadokun (Household precepts), Ekken-kai, eds., Ekken zenshu (Collected works Collected Works is a Big Finish original anthology edited by Nick Wallace, featuring Bernice Summerfield, a character from the spin-off media based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who.  of Kaibara Ekken), Vol. 3 (Tokyo, 1911), p. 452.

55. #195, Takada and Miyata, Namazu-e, pp. 222, 356-357.

56. #92, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 224, 300-301; and Wakamizu, Namazu wa odoru, pp. 60-61.

57. For a discussion of these wages, see Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, pp. 201-205.

58. Kitani, "Kurobune," p. 58.

59. For example, see #126 and #127, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 110, 231, 319-320.

60. #131, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 8, 321.

61. Abe, "Amaterasu," pp. 29-32.

62. #191, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, p. 355

63. #142, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 236, 327-328.

64. Translation of the text of this print is found in Peter Duus, The Japanese Discovery of America: A Brief History with Documents (New York, 1997) and in Steele, Alternative Narratives, pp. 16-17.

65. The reference to "the Russians" is almost certainly about the Diana, the Russian warship damaged by the tsunami resulting from the Ansei Tokai Earthquake. While it was in transit to Heta on the Izu peninsula Izu Peninsula

Peninsula, central Honshu, Japan. It extends 37 mi (60 km) into the Pacific Ocean and consists largely of volcanic rock and highly eroded volcanoes. It is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park, and its hot springs and warm winter climate are major tourist
 to undergo repairs, a violent storm arose and sunk it. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, pp. 67-68.

66. Abe, "Amaterasu," pp. 32-34. Abe also discusses another print that posits the earthquake as an attempt by the namazu to strike out at the foreigners who have lately come to Japan, pp. 34-35. Again the main point for our purposes is that the earthquake, in some instances, has led to the explicit self-conscious identification by Edo residents of membership in the entity "Japan."

67. Noguchi provides a masterful and detailed analysis of this remarkable convergence among geology, geography, and politics. See Ansei Edo jishin, pp.73-108. There were commoner neighborhoods elsewhere in the city that did suffer severe damage, but not around Edo Castle. For a detailed discussion of the earthquake damage as a function of social status, see Kitahara, Jishin no shakaishi, pp. 45-79.

68. For details of the maneuvering leading up to the ban and printing block destruction, see Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, pp. 205-208.

69. Abe, "Amaterasu," pp. 46-47.

70. For a good summary of the situation in late Tokugawa Japan with respect to self images, see Fujitani, Splendid Monarchy, esp. pp. 1-9.

71. E. J. Hobsbawm, Nations and Nationalism Nations and Nationalism is a scholarly interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal on nationalism. It is published quarterly on behalf of the Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism, by Blackwell Publishers, and is available online via Blackwell Synergy.  Since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality (Cambridge, UK, 1990); Ernest Gellner, Nations and Nationalism (Ithaca, NY, 1983); Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities The imagined community is a concept coined by Benedict Anderson which states that a nation is a community socially constructed and ultimately imagined by the people who perceive themselves as part of that group. : Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, Revised Edition (New York, 1991).

72. I use the expression "make Japanese" in the same sense as Massimo d'Azeglio Massimo Taparelli, marquis d'Azeglio (October 24, 1798 - January 15, 1866), was an Italian statesman, novelist and painter. Biography
Marquis d'Azeglio was born at Turin, descended from an ancient and noble Piedmontese family.
, who, after Italy's unification in 1860, made his famous remark that "We have made Italy; we now have to make Italians."

73. For a superb study of the competing views of Japanese national identity prior to the 1940s, see Eiji Oguma, A Genealogy genealogy (jē'nēŏl`əjē, –ăl`–, jĕ–), the study of family lineage. Genealogies have existed since ancient times.  of 'Japanese' Self-Images, David Askew a·skew  
adv. & adj.
To one side; awry: rugs lying askew.



[Probably a-2 + skew.
, trans. (Melbourne, Australia, 2002).

74. #68, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 111, 284-285.

75. See #66 and #81, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 110, 282-283, 295. Abe provides a trenchant analysis of them. See, "Amaterasu," pp. 37-40.

76. #43, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 109, 265-266. See also Abe, "Amaterasu," pp. 43-44.

77. Steele, Alternative Narratives, pp. 4-18.

78. Abe, "Amaterasu," p. 45.

79. For excellent studies of commoner views of and reactions to the Meiji Restoration in and around Edo, see Steele, Alternative Narratives, pp. 32-87.

80. Abe, "Amaterasu," p. 45.

81. #191, Miyata and Takada, Namazu-e, pp. 17, 355.

82. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, pp. 212-216.

83. Wilson, Patriots and Redeemers, esp. Chapter Six, "What the Hell! Ee ja nai ka Dancing as a Form of Protest," pp. 95-131.

84. For an account of the continuous barrage of storms and plagues that hit Edo almost every year after 1855, see Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, pp. 216-222.

85. Noguchi, Ansei Edo jishin, pp. 225-229.

86. Abe, "Amaterasu," p. 48.

87. Abe, "Amaterasu," p. 50.

By Gregory Smits

Pennsylvania State University Pennsylvania State University, main campus at University Park, State College; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855, opened 1859 as Farmers' High School.  
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