Popular Protest in Post War Japan: The Antiwar Art of Shikoku Gorō

Mother and Child Fleeing

Together, Shikoku, Tōge, and college students, union members, and other young people in the circle would create the tsuji-shi. Sometimes the poem came first. Working from the poem “Stop It!” Shikoku conceived of a dynamic composition that combined striking image and text. He used a brush in tsujishi to write provocative verse in big letters and drew bold images—some abstract and ghostlike, as in “It was the Smell of a Woman’s Hair” and others realistic as in “Mother and Child Fleeing” --so that passersby might pause long enough to add their signatures to a petition and talk about current events.

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