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 Collection
Identifier: MC 1219

Michi Nakao Collection

Dates

  • 1874-1993

Scope and Content Note

The Michi Nakao Collection consists of approximately 3.3 cubic feet of materials, comprising three records center cartons and one manuscript box, spanning the period 1974 to 1993. The collection chiefly contains Nakao's writings and research materials on Sen Katayama. It also includes research materials on other individuals and topics, photographs, correspondence, journals, and memoranda. Most of the items in the collection are in Japanese.

Series I: Writings and Research Materials

The first set of documents in this series describes Nakao as a writer, who devoted her later years to research on Katayama and also had a variety of interests. These documents include manuscripts of Fuyu no hoko and published articles of the same work from Japan/New York. Also included are drafts on subjects such as breast cancer and Japanese immigrants, and articles on a variety of topics written for Japan/New York. These documents reflect her dedication to research, writing, and publication. The research materials mainly concern on Katayama. These documents include photocopies of his writings, excerpts, articles, and newspaper clippings about him. Also included are photocopies of primary source documents, such as diplomas, family registers, his police record, and correspondence, as well as research materials on other individuals. These documents offer an in-depth look at Katayama, while suggesting related avenues of research.

Series II: Photographs and Personal Miscellanea

Photographs and Personal Miscellanea, ca. 1987-1993 (5 folders) deals not only with Katayama, but also with Nakao's personal life. This series includes photographs, some of which are related to Katayama, other to Nakao. The first group of consists of photographs of her trip to San Francisco in order to meet Karl G. Yoneda, a Communist and Katayama researcher. The second group consists of photographs of Katayama's hometown. The third group consists of her personal photographs. Also included were letters exchanged between Nakao and acquaintances, journals, and miscellanea. The series provides good visual resources on Katayama and also a glimpse at Nakao's life.

Series III: Editorial and Research Correspondence

Editorial and Research Correspondence, 1985-1989 (2 folders) describes the process of researching and writing Fuyu no hoko. This series includes letters exchanged between Nakao and the editors of Chikuma Shobo, as well as her and the editor of Shinchosha. Her proofreader's notes are found in this series as well. Also included are letters from the institutions in the United States that Katayama attended, and memoranda.

Extent

3.3 Cubic Feet (3 records center cartons and 1 manuscript box))

Language of Materials

Japanese and English

Provenance

The Michi Nakao Collection was compiled mostly by Nakao herself for her research on Sen Katayama and other topics. Some items, such as the sets of photographs, seem to have been added to the collection by an acquaintance of Nakao after her death. Subsequently, the collection was given to Ryoko Toyama, the former director of (Rutgers) New Brunswick Libraries, who was a personal acquaintance of Nakao. Toyama donated the collection to Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries, in 1993.

Abstract

The Michi Nakao Collection chiefly contains Nakao's writings and research materials on Sen Katayama, a founding member of both the American and Japanese Communist parties, as well as, in Japan, a pioneer of the socialist movement, a founder of the profession of social work, a leader in the early trade union movement, and the editor of Japan's first labor newspaper. It also includes research materials on other individuals and topics, photographs, correspondence, journals, and memoranda. Most of the items in the collection are in Japanese.

Biographical Note for Michi Nakao

Michiko (Michi) Nakao was an editor and writer who greatly contributed to the Japanese community in New York. She was born in Hokkaido, Japan, in 1934. In Japan, Nakao worked for Iwanami Shoten, one of the most well-regarded publishers in the country. In 1956, Nakao received a scholarship to study in the United States, first at Villa Maria College in Buffalo, New York, and from 1960, at Columbia University. Unfortunately, Nakao had to leave the university due to an injury caused by a car accident. After her recovery, she worked for two Japanese companies in New York from 1965 to 1975.

In 1976, Nakao began to publish Japan/New York, a magazine for the Japanese community, and founded the publisher Vega Japan in 1983. Meanwhile, she continued to write and do research, publishing Onna hitori de kurasu New York (Tokyo: Shinchosha, 1985) and New York no career women (Tokyo: Shinchosha, 1987). She also worked on several books which were never published. One of these was, Fuyu no hoko, was about the Japanese Communist and labor leader Sen Katayama. Although it was not published as a monograph, the series of articles titled Fuyu no hoko is available in Japan/New York. The other, Umi wo koete, was about Japanese immigrants in the United States. She ceased publishing Japan/New York in 1990. Subsequently in 1991, Nakao was diagnosed with breast cancer. She died in Japan on March 29, 1993. Nakao made a large bequest to the Rutgers University Libraries, which is used for the purchase of Japanese-language materials.

Biographical Note for Sen Katayama

Sen Katayama was a founding member of both the American and Japanese Communist parties, as well as, in Japan, a pioneer of the socialist movement, a founder of the profession of social work, a leader in the early trade union movement, and the editor of Japan's first labor newspaper. Sugataro Yabuki (known as Sen Katayama) was born in Hadeki-mura, Kume-gun, Mimasaka, which would become Okayama prefecture. At the age of nineteen, he was adopted into the Katayama family. He began to live in Tokyo in 1881, where he studied at a small preparatory school, the Oka Juku. At the school, he formed a lifelong friendship with Seishichi Iwasaki, whose uncle was one of the founders of the Mitsubishi Corporation, and who would later found Tokyo Gas and other large companies. Inspired by Iwasaki, Katayama decided to go to the United States. In 1888, he enrolled in Maryville College in Tennessee, transferring to Grinnell College in Iowa the following year. After his graduation in 1892, he attended Andover Theological Seminary, moving to Yale Divinity School in 1894. Through these experiences, he became a socialist and Christian.

Katayama returned to Japan in 1896, becoming the director of a settlement house called Kingsley Hall. In 1897, the first modern union in the country, Tekko Kumiai (the Ironworkers Union) was founded with Katayama as secretary. Along with the socialist and anarchist Shusui Kotoku and others, Katayama founded the Shakai minshuto (Social Democratic Party) in 1901, the first socialistic party in Japan. In 1904, Katayama attended the International Socialist Congress in Amsterdam and an American Socialist Party convention in Chicago. In 1906, he returned to Japan, where he remained active in the socialist movement. In cooperation with Kotoku, he helped found the Nihon shakaito (Japan's Socialist Party) in 1906. The two eventually split, however, over Kotoku's advocacy of direct action. In 1912, Katayama was imprisoned over his participation in the Tokyo Streetcar Strike. He soon left Japan for good, moving to California. Attracted by the success of the Bolshevik revolution of 1917, he became a Communist. He went to Mexico in 1921 as an officer for the Comintern, and afterwards was called to Moscow, from where he worked to establish the Nihon kyosanto (Japanese Communist Party). Katayama Sen died in Moscow on November 5, 1933 and was buried in the Kremlin.

Arrangement

The Nakao Collection is arranged into three series. Within each series, items are grouped by format and arranged chronologically within each format. The series are:

  1. Series I: Writings and Research Materials
  2. Series II: Photographs and Personal Miscellanea
  3. Series III: Editorial and Research Correspondence

Separated Material

The monographs, periodicals, and newspapers originally contained in the Michi Nakao Collection were sent to the East Asian Library, Rutgers University Libraries.

Bibliography

Katayama, Sen. Aruite kitamichi. Tokyo: Nihon Tosho Center, 2000. ———. Jiden. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1954. ———. The Labor Movement in Japan. Chicago: Kerr, 1918. ———. Waga kaiso. Tokyo: Tokuma Shoten, 1967. Kishimoto, Eitaro, Haruo Watanabe, and Hirotake Koyama. Katayama Sen. Tokyo: Miraisha, 1959-1960. Kublin, Hyman. Asian Revolutionary: The Life of Sen Katayama. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1964. Nakao, Michi. New York no career women. Tokyo: Shinchosha, 1987. Nakao, Michi. Onna hitori de kurasu New York. Tokyo: Shinchosha, 1985.

Processing Note

The Michi Nakao Collection came to Rutgers in an unknown order. Some groupings, for example, Fuyu no hoko drafts and articles, photocopied materials, photographs, and so forth, were somewhat understandable, although even some of the same formats, such as drafts, were arranged separately. Moreover, the collection included photocopies of book excerpts and articles, whose sources were not specified, some of which were later located and identified. Subsequently, the collection was rearranged by format and ordered chronologically within each format. The monographs, periodicals, and newspapers originally contained in the collection were sent to the East Asian Library, Rutgers University Libraries.

Title
Guide to the Michi Nakao Collection, 1874-1993 MC 1219
Status
Edited Full Draft
Author
Kumiko Katoh and Fernanda Perrone
Date
May 2006
Language of description note
Description is written in: Undetermined, Code for undetermined script script.