词条 | Aki no Arashi |
释义 |
The full name is {{nihongo2|反天皇制全国個人共闘・秋の嵐}} (Han Tennosei Zenkoku Kojin Kyōtō - Aki no Arashi) meaning Anti-Imperial System National Individuals' Joint Struggle Committee. The group was started in 1987 by a radical group of students at Waseda University in Tokyo and street punk rockers. They often used street performances to spread their message.[1][2] In 1996 members of Aki no Arashi won a lawsuit against the Tokyo Metropolitan Government for unlawful arrests and battery by Tokyo police. The events took place during a series of rallies organized by the group in 1989, after the death of Emperor Showa.[3] References1. ^{{cite book|last=Kohso|first=Sabu|title=Japan after Japan: social and cultural life from the recessionary 1990s to the present|editor=Tomiko Yoda |editor2=Harry D. Harootunian|publisher=Duke University Press|year=2006|series=Asia-Pacific: culture, politics, and society|pages=430–431|chapter=Angelus Novus in Millennial Japan|isbn=0-8223-3813-0|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X3AUhtsF-UoC&pg=PA430|accessdate=2009-12-19}} {{Japan-org-stub}}2. ^{{cite book|last=Steinhoff|first=Patricia G.|title=New perspectives in political ethnography|editor=Lauren Joseph |editor2=Matthew Mahler |editor3=Javier Auyero|publisher=Springer|year=2007|pages=78–80|chapter=Radical Outcasts Versus Three Kinds of Police: Constructing Limits in Japanese Anti-Emperor Protests|isbn=0-387-72593-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wpAJjp9PkNwC&pg=PT78|accessdate=2009-12-19}} Also in Qualitative Sociology: {{doi|10.1007/s11133-006-9030-0}} 3. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/55a/458.html|title=Anti-Imperial Activists Win Lawsuit Against Police|date=17 October 1996|work=The Japan Times|accessdate=19 December 2009}} 3 : Political organizations in Japan|Republicanism in Japan|Organizations established in 1987 |
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