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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ōsugi_SakaeŌsugi Sakae - Wikipedia

    Ōsugi Sakae (大杉 栄, 1885–1923) was a prominent Japanese anarchist who was jailed multiple times for his writings and activism. He was murdered alongside his partner, Itō Noe , in what became known as the Amakasu incident .

  2. Ōsugi Sakae (1885–1923) Ōsugi Sakae, Japanese anarchist intellectual leader, was a prolific writer and translator of the works of anarchists including Kropotkin, Bakunin, and Goldman. Born in Shikoku, Ōsugi attended Nagoya Cadet School until his expulsion for disorderly conduct in 1901. Thereafter he moved to Tokyo to attend middle school ...

  3. A biography of Sakae Ōsugi, a radical Japanese anarchist during the Meiji Period. Ōsugi published numerous anarchist periodicals, helped translate western anarchist essays into Japanese, and created Japan's first Esperanto school in 1906. He and others were murdered in 1923 by military police in what became known as the Amakasu Incident.

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  4. The abrupt shifts from past to present tense and back again are Ōsugi's, not the translator's -- perhaps reflecting the dreamlike quality of the narration. [2] English in the original. The term appears to be associated with the writing of Inoue Enryō (1858-1919), who attempted to reconcile Hegel's philosophy with Buddhism on the grounds that both were forms of "pan-rationalism" or "panlogism."

  5. Social Idealism. After the execution Kōtoku Shūsui in 1911 , Ōsugi Sakae (1885–1923) became one of the leading anarchists in japan. He had escaped arrest in the high treason trial that sent Kōtoku, Kanno and the others to their deaths because he was already in prison for his anarchist activities. He advocated and practiced free love, and ...

  6. Other articles where Osugi Sakae is discussed: anarchism: Anarchism in Japan: Osugi Sakae, the foremost figure in Japanese anarchism in the decade after Kotoku’s death, published anarchist newspapers and led organizing campaigns among industrial workers. His efforts were hampered by continuous police repression, however, and he had very little impact in Japan. Nevertheless, Osugi greatly influenced…

  7. Feb 26, 2011 · I cannot help but smile at myself when I reflect upon the life of our ancestor Bakunin." Ôsugi Sakae. Ôsugi himself was a born rebel, a truly uncompromising anarchist who put his numerous prison sentences to good use by resolving to learn a new foreign language with each imprisonment. Despite his reputation as a thinker and translator in the ...