Abstract

In this article I consider recent homeless activism in Tokyo's Miyashita Park, including the celebration of ‘vacant lots’ (akichi), and what this can tell us about notions of publicness in Japan. We can provide further depth to the discussion of publicness by situating recent activism in the context of the work of historians such as Amino Yoshihiko and Higashijima Makoto and their recovery of indigenous Japanese conceptions of ‘publicness’ and ‘the public sphere’. The implications of formulations of ‘the public’ based around terms such as ōyake/kō and alternatives including muen are examined, as well as meanings historically ascribed to the Zen concept of ‘lakes and rivers’ (gōko/kōko). I also trace Japanese responses to classical Western notions of the public sphere, as well as some challenges to them in Western scholarship, including the notion of ‘counterpublics’. Whereas in Western modernity the bracketing of social inequalities was considered a prerequisite for the deliberative function of the public sphere, in premodern and early modern Japan there were spaces which allowed for the bracketing of differences even where the function of deliberation was not emphasised.

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