Episode 563 – You Gotta Fight for Your Right to Party, Part 2

This week, we cover the second and third of Edo’s three great riots in 1787 and 1866. How did samurai and commoners talk about these acts of mass violence? How was all this a manifestation of a sense of “street justice” among the masses? And what’s with the handsome young guy everyone keeps swearing was secretly behind the whole thing?

Sources

Takeuchi, Makoto, “Festivals and Fights: The Law and the People of Edo” and Anne Walthall, “Edo Riots” in Edo and Paris: Urban Life and the State in the Early Modern Era. Eds. James L. McClain, John M. Merriman, and Ugawa Kaoru.

Walthall, Anne. “Devoted Wives/Unruly Women: Invisible Presence in the History of Japanese Social Protest.” Signs 20, no. 1 (1994)

Images

Depiction of a soup kitchen set up for charity in 1866. Measures like this provided temporary relief but couldn’t fix the shogunate’s core issues.
Rioting in Edo as depicted by kawaraban in 1866.
Ichikawa Danjuro VIII playing the aragoto-style lead of the kabuki play Shibaraku. Could roles like this have inspired all the talk of mysterious handsome youths leading the rioters?
Ransacking of a rice warehouse in 1866.

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