August 25th, 2009
Kanikosen
Kanikōsen (蟹工船?) (published in English as The Crab Canning Ship or The
Crab Ship) is a novel by Takiji Kobayashi, written in 1929. Written
from a left-wing point of view, it concerns the crew of a crab fishing
ship's hardships as they struggle under capitalist exploitation. The
book has been made into a film and as manga. It is a short work,
totalling around 80 pages in its English language translation.In 2008,
Kanikosen became the "surprise runaway best-selling book of the year"
in Japan.
Synopsis:
A crab fishing ship goes to the open sea off Kamchatka (now in Russia
but then in the Soviet Union). The crew do not favour their prospects;
one crewman declares "We're going to Hell!" The crew revolt against
their sadistic captain and foreman, form a union and take over the
ship. However the new order on board is suppressed by soldiers.
The book expresses its pessimism from the beginning, not only in the
opening remark but in the description of the harbour of Hakodate being
filled with rubbish, and the smaller boats being compared to insects.
The Author
Takiji Kobayashi (小林 多喜二 Kobayashi Takiji?, October 13, 1903 – February
20, 1933) was a Japanese author of proletarian literature.
Kobayashi was born in Odate, Akita and was brought up in Otaru,
Hokkaidō. After graduating the Otaru School of Higher Learning, which
is the current Otaru University of Commerce, he worked at the Otaru
branch of Hokkaido Takushoku Bank. His most famous work is Kanikosen,
or Crab-Canning Boat – a novel published in 1929. It tells the story of
several different people and the beginning of organization into unions
of fishing workers. He joined the Japanese Communist Party in 1931. The
young writer was killed during a torture session by Tokkō police two
years later, at age 29.
At the age of four his family moved to Otaru, Hokkaidō. The family was
not wealthy, but Kobayashi's uncle paid his schooling expenses and he
was able to attend Hokkaido Otaru Commercial High School and Otaru
Commercial School of Higher Learning. While studying he became
interested in writing, and submitted essays to literary magazines,
served in the editorial committee for his school's alumni association
magazine, and also had his own writing published. One of his teachers
at school was economist, critic, and poet Nobuyuki Okuma. Around this
time, due to financial hardship and the current economic recession of
the time, he joined the labor movement.
After graduating school he worked in the Otaru branch of the Hokkaido
Takushoku Bank. In the 1928 general election, Kobayashi helped with
election candidate Kenzo Yamamoto's campaign, and went to Yamamoto's
campaign speech in a village at the base of Mount Yōtei. This
experience was later incorporated into his book 東倶知安行. In the same year
his story March 15, 1928 (based on the March 15 incident) was published
in the literary magazine Senki ("Red Flag" in Japanese). The story
depicted torture by the Tokkō police, which in turn infuriated
government officials, and would become the trigger for Kobayashi's
eventual murder.
In 1929 his story Kanikosen was also published in Senki, and quickly
gained attention and became the standard bearer of proletarian
literature. In July of that year it was adapted into a theatrical
performance and was performed at the Imperial Garden Theater under the
title 北緯五十度以北 (North of latitude 50 degrees north). However the police
(in particular the Tokkō police of the time) marked him for
surveillance. In the same year his essay "Absentee Landlord"
(Fuzaijinushi) published in Chūōkōron magazine became grounds for his
dismissal from his job at the bank.
In the spring of 1930 he moved to Tokyo and became the secretary
general of the Proletarian Writer's Guild of Japan. On May 23 he was
arrested on suspicion of giving financial support to the Japan
Communist Party, and was temporarily released on June 7. After
returning to Tokyo on June 24, he was again arrested and in July, due
to Kanikosen he was further indicted on charges of Lèse majesté. In
August, he was prosecuted under the Public Order and Police Law of 1900
and was imprisoned in Toyotama Penitentiary. On January 22 1931 he was
released on bail. He then secluded himself at the Nanasawa Hot Spring
in Kanagawa Prefecture. In October 1931 he became a member of the
outlawed Japan Communist Party . In November he visited the mansion of
Naoya Shiga in Nara Prefecture. In the spring of 1932 he went
underground.
On February 20 1933 he went to a meeting spot in Akasaka to meet with a
fellow Communist Party member, who was in reality a spy from the Tokkō
police who had infiltrated the party. The Tokkō were lying in wait for
him, and although he tried to escape, he was captured and arrested. He
was apparently stripped naked in the freezing winter cold, beaten with
thick sticks, and then taken to a hospital where he died at 7:45 pm.
Police authorities announced the following day that he had died of a
heart attack. However the next day when his family received his body,
they saw his whole body was swollen from torture, in particular the
lower half of his body was darkish from internal haemorrhaging. No
hospital would perform an autopsy for fear of the Tokkō police. His
postmortem face was published in the Communist Party newspaper Shimbun
Akahata.
Other Version:
n 1953 the film Kanikōsen was released, directed by Sō Yamamura and
starring himself, Masayuki Mori and Sumiko Hidaka. It was awarded the
best cinematography prize at the 1954 Mainichi Film Concours.
A manga version of the book first appeared in 2006.
A remake of the film Kanikōsen, directed by Hiroyuki Tanaka and
starring Ryūhei Matsuda and Hidetoshi Nishijima was completed in 2009.

