Chūō Kōron
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is a monthly Japanese
literary magazine A literary magazine is a periodical devoted to literature in a broad sense. Literary magazines usually publish short stories, poetry, and essays, along with literary criticism, book reviews, biographical profiles of authors, interviews and letter ...
(), first established during the Meiji period and continuing to this day. It is published by its namesake-bearing Chūōkōron Shinsha (formerly Chūōkōron-sha). The headquarters is in Tokyo. ''Chūō Kōron'' publishes a wide variety of material, including novels, photographs and reports based on various philosophical, economic, political, cultural and social topics.


Early history

The magazine was first published in January 1887 under the title in Kyoto by the , a literary group of professors and students of Ryukoku University. In 1899, the magazine changed its name to ''Chūō Kōron''. In the 1920s, journalist Yūsaku Shimanaka rose to become editor-in-chief and later owner of ''Chūō Kōron.'' During the World War II editors of the magazine were arrested in the Yokohama incident. In 1944 the magazine was closed down due to its anti-war sentiments but publication resumed in 1946. In 1949, ownership and control of the magazine passed to his son, Hōji Shimanaka, who would serve as its president for the next 45 years. Under the Shimanakas, ''Chūō Kōron'' became one of Japan's foremost general-interest magazines, and has been cited as having a profound influence on several Japanese intellectuals. The noted author Ryōtarō Shiba once stated that the magazine's history corresponded to the history of modern Japan itself. There have been numerous famous contributors to the magazine, including Princess Takamatsu, Tama Morita,
Jun'ichirō Tanizaki was a Japanese author who is considered to be one of the most prominent figures in modern Japanese literature. The tone and subject matter of his work ranges from shocking depictions of sexuality and destructive erotic obsessions to subtle por ...
, Tōson Shimazaki,
Shōfu Muramatsu , the pen-name of Muramatsu Giichi, was a Japanese novelist active during the Shōwa period of Japan. Early life Muramatsu was born in what is now part of the town of Mori, Shizuoka, Mori, in Shizuoka prefecture, which was (and is) a rural distr ...
, his grandson
Tomomi Muramatsu is a novelist in late Shōwa period and Heisei period Japan. Biography Muramatsu was born in Tokyo, but was raised in Shimizu, Shizuoka. His grandfather was the noted writer Muramatsu Shofu, and both his father and his mother worked for the li ...
,
Yaeko Nogami Yaeko is a female Japanese given name. People *, Ainu waka poet and evangelist. *, Japanese nurse, wife of Joseph Hardy Neesima *, Japanese novelist *, Japanese volleyball player *, Japanese woman kidnapped by North Korea * Yaeko Uehara, a gei ...
, Tomoyoshi Murayama, Motojirō Kajii,
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, Nanami Shiono, Shichirō Fukazawa, and Masao Horino.


Shimanaka incident

In 1960, ''Chūō Kōron'' was at the center of a major controversy that shaped the future of freedom of expression in Japan. The magazine's November 1960 issue featured a satirical story by Shichirō Fukazawa featuring a dream sequence in which the Emperor and Empress were beheaded with a guillotine. Japanese right-wing ultranationalist groups were outraged and mounted a long series of protests and attacks aimed at ''Chūō Kōron'' in an attempt to force an apology. An initial attempt at apology was deemed too perfunctory by the rightists, and on the evening of February 1, 1961, a 17-year-old rightist named Kazutaka Komori invaded ''Chūō Kōron'' publisher Shimanaka Hōji's home in
Shinjuku is a special ward in Tokyo, Japan. It is a major commercial and administrative centre, housing the northern half of the busiest railway station in the world (Shinjuku Station) and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building, the administration ...
, Tokyo in an apparent assassination attempt. Shimanaka was away from home at the time, but his housekeeper was stabbed to death and his wife was seriously injured, in a terroristic attack that became known as the " Shimanaka Incident." Shimanaka was deeply shaken by the attack on his household and issued a statement of remorse in which he repudiated Fukazawa's story as “unsuitable for print" and offered his "deepest apologies" for “having disturbed society to the point of causing violent incidents." Thereafter, Shimanaka forced the magazine's editor-in-chief to resign, and negotiated a deal with right-wing groups to end the attacks on ''Chūō Kōron'' in exchange for a promise to adopt a more "neutral" (i.e. conservative) editorial policy. The Shimanaka incident has been cited by scholars as helping to cement in place the so-called Chrysanthemum Taboo (菊タブー, ''kiku tabū'', named after the Imperial family's chrysanthemum crest) in postwar Japan that informally but powerfully forbids literary or artistic expression directly featuring the Emperor or the Imperial family.


Recent history

From 1985 to 1988 Motohiro Kondo served as the editor-in-chief of the magazine. In 1994, Shimanaka resigned as president of ''Chūō Kōron'' after 45 years, succeeded by his eldest son Yukio, and became chairman of the board of directors. However two years later, in 1996, he fired Yukio and for a time the company had no president. When Shimanaka died on April 3, 1997, it was discovered that he had co-mingled the company's finances with his own, leaving behind a massive debt of 15 billion yen. Shimanaka's wife Masako became chairman and president, but was not able to resolve the company's financial crisis. In 1999, Chūōkōron-sha and all of its assets were bought out by the '' Yomiuri Shinbun'' newspaper company. Thereafter, the magazine's tone and content took a decidedly more politically conservative direction, in line with ''Yomiuri'''s broader editorial stance. As of 2006 the circulation of ''Chūō Kōron'' was 40,975 copies.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Chuo Koron 1887 establishments in Japan Literary magazines published in Japan Magazines established in 1887 Magazines published in Tokyo Mass media in Kyoto Monthly magazines published in Japan