Igarashi, Y. (2006) ‘Role of Critical Psychology in Japan: Protest Against Positivistic Psychology and Search for New Knowledge of the Mind’, Annual Review of Critical Psychology, 5, pp. 156-166 www.discourseunit.com/arcp/5 Yasuhiro Igarashi1 Role of Critical Psychology in Japan: Protest Against Positivistic Psychology and Search for New Knowledge of the Mind 1. Introduction of Western psychology and Americanisation after WWII The history of modern psychology in Japan parallels the course of modernization of Japanese society in general. During the Tokugawa period (1603-1866), in which Samurai feudal lords governed the country, schools of Confucians developed systems of thoughts, which explained nature and mechanism of the universe. They included some theories on mind that explained the way people conducted themselves, and they proposed norms and morals according to which men and women should act. With these theories on mind, there existed some folk psychology concerning people’s ordinary conducts and their mental experiences of emotions, desires, volitions, and so on. Such folk psychology was expressed in literary works as explanation of the way the mind works. For these Confucian theories of mind and folk psychology in the history of Japanese mentality, see Kato (1979, 1983, 1997). After the Meiji Restoration (1867-1868), the government of emperor’s bureaucrats begun to introduce a policy of increasing wealth and military power in face of expansion of Western colonialism in Far East2. Various western knowledge and institutions were introduced from western countries in almost all spheres in order to modernize Japan and to catch up with the advanced western countries. It was the same for psychology. Western psychology was introduced in Japan as a ‘new-knowledge’ from advanced countries of North America and Europe with the translation of psychology literatures in western languages. The first book titled ‘Shin-ri-gaku, which means ‘Psychology’ in Japanese, was published in 1875. It was a Japanese version of J. Haven’s ‘Mental Philosophy Including Intellect, Sensibilities, and Will’ (1857)3. From 1880s, psychology courses were taught in teachers colleges. It was thought that schoolteachers had to take psychology courses to understand their future pupils better. At the University of Tokyo, Yujiro Motora, who worked on psychophysics at Johns Hopkins University (USA) with G.S. Hall who later became the first president of American Psychological Association (1892), began to teach psychophysics in 1888 and established the first laboratory of psychology in 1903. At the turn of century, Japanese psychologists began to operate as an actor both in academia and in society. By 1920s, there existed a wide range of research interests ranging from experimental psychology such as sensation and perception to 1 Contact: VEH03661@nifty.ne.jp and igarashiy@yamano.ac.jp Before Russo-Japanese War (1904-05), the policy was rather defensive in the aim of protecting the independence of the country from the pressure of Western imperialism. But after the victory in that war, Japan emerged as a new colonial power in East Asia. 3 Haven was a moral philosopher of the Scotland school, professor of intellectual and moral philosophy at Amherst College, USA. Prior to the introduction of so-called modern psychology, a book of moral philosophy was published in Japan for the first time in the name of psychology. 2 156 applied psychology such as educational and industrial psychology. For a concise history of Japanese psychology, see Oyama, Sato, & Suzuki (2002) and Sato (2005). From the late 1930s to 1945, in the era of war in China, Southeast Asia and the Pacific area, most disciplines of learning were mobilized to a war footing under the rule of the ultranationalistic militarist government. Psychologists who did research and teaching at universities and practiced in educational and industrial settings, were also mobilized. Some psychologists were conscripted and were sent to battlefield as soldiers. Some began to work on topics of military and defence psychology. But in this wartime era, researches on topics of established schools like Gestalt psychology were continued and some began to study new trends of psychology such as neo-behaviorism and logical positivism. Those who survived the war came to lead Japanese psychology in the latter half of 20th century. After WWII, full scale neo-behaviorism and operationalism were introduced from North America. It happened in accordance with wholesale transformation of various institutions. After WWII, Japan was occupied by the US army. A number of political, economic, and social institutions were reformed or newly founded under the guidance of the US occupation forces. They were to demilitarise and democratise the Japanese government and society, which had been held responsible for the ultra-nationalism that finally culminated with the war disaster. But once the Cold War had begun and communist governments had been established in China and North Korea, the US government placed great emphasis on Japan’s role as an aegis of the free world in Asia to defend against expansion of communism. Furthermore, the US government began to support and guide conservative administrations using several leaders of the former militarist government to stabilize society and to reinforce the anticommunist policies. The foreign policy of Japan has been strongly affected by US government since this era. In the sphere of culture and learning, American intellectual and cultural products were introduced like a deluge in line with this social change brought about by US policy to Japan. Not only popular culture such as movies and pop music, but also learning amongst Japanese intellectuals was Americanised rapidly. It seems that this cultural situation was common to many other countries that were supported and led by the US government after WWII. As a consequence, Japanese psychology was wholly Americanised as were many other fields of learning since the 1950s. It has been dominated by North-American main stream psychology, namely neo-behavioristic S-O-R type psychology, that understand the human mind (covert mental processes of Organism) as incited by some external Stimuli that can be observed objectively, and as manifested overtly in Responses that can be measured and quantified objectively. In this meta-theory (i.e. a paradigm or a philosophy) of psychology, human mind was to be regarded as something passively activated by stimuli external to the person. Since mental processes such as learning, memory and reasoning were located in an individual’s head and isolated from social context studies did not take the context into account. This view of the mind is regarded not as one that is specific to western culture, especially to NorthAmerican culture, as something socially constructed in the course of history. It is regarded as the true theory of mind that is universal and trans-historical irrespective of social context by mainstream psychology still today (Cf. Danziger, 1997). Table 1. Important events in the history of Japanese Psychology 1867-68 Meiji Restoration. 157 1875 A.Nishi translated J.Haven’s ‘Mental Philosophy Including Intellect Sensibilities, and Will’ into Japanese. The first book entitled ‘Psychology’ in Japanese. 1882 T. Inoue translated A.Bain’s ‘Mental Science’ into Japanese. 1887 G.S.Hall & M.Motora’s paper, ‘Dermal sensitiveness to gradual pressure changes’ (American Journal of Psychology, 1,32-55.). 1888 Motora’s lecture on Psychophysics at University of Tokyo. 1889 Meiji Constitution. 1894 T.Tanaka translated T.Ribot’s ‘Psychologie Allemande Contemporaine’ into Japanese. First Sino-Japanese War (1894-95). 1903 Laboratory of Psychology was founded at University of Tokyo. The first psychology laboratory in Japan. 1904-05 Russo-Japanese War. 1907 Introduction of Binet-Simon Test. Several Japanese versions of Binet-Simon Test were designed rapidly. Applications of psychological studies to practical problem like education and industrial setting were vigorous. 1909 The first open lecture of ‘the Popular Science Association’. Not only psychologists but also people became interested in this ‘new knowledge’. So psychologists planned open lecture for the public. It attracted large audiences. 1910 T.Fukurai’s experiment on ‘clairvoyance’. The experiment remains famous even today in the field of parapsychology. 1912 The first issue of ‘Psychological Research’. 1914 Japan enters World WarⅠ. 1926 The first issue of ‘Japanese Journal of Psychology’. 1927 The first conference of Japanese Psychological Association, JPA. 1931 Manchurian Incident. 1941 Attack on Pearl Harbor 1947 The 11th annual convention of JPA. The first nation-wide conference after WW II. 1951 San Francisco Pease Treaty signed. 1972 The 20th International Congress of Psychology in Tokyo. Recognition of Japanese psychology by ‘advanced’ western psychologists. 1988 Foundation of the Japanese Certification Board for Clinical Psychologist, JCBCP. Qualification of the Certified Clinical Psychologist, CCP. (15,097 CCPs in 2006) 1996 Introduction of ‘shitei-daigakuin (qualified graduate course for CCP)’ by JCBCP. (146 courses in 2006) 2002 The first issue of ‘Qualitative Research in Psychology’ 2. Dominance of mainstream positivistic psychology The Americanisation of psychology means the dominance of neo-behavioristic S-O-R type psychology, which exclusively adopts quantitative research methods like laboratory experiments and large-N questionnaires and heavily stresses objectivity of research and numerical quantitative data. Since the 1950s, experimental psychology such like psychology of learning and perception was the leader within academia.4 Clinical psychology, which was 4 Even in the heyday of neo-behaviorism, psychology of perception was popular in Japan. It had been flourishing since the inception of Gestalt psychology in 1920s. 158 also introduced wholesale from North America after WWII, and other areas of applied psychology were regarded as secondary status. In this climate, a lot of researches were conducted in university laboratories. But most of researches in this era were a kind of replication of researches in North America, using the same research materials but with different subjects, namely Japanese people. Unfortunately, this situation still has not changed and the presuppositions of the imported American psychology go unchallenged without questioning the presuppositions of North-American mainstream psychology (Cf. Fox & Prilleltensky, 1997). Japanese theoretical psychologists only began to examine these metatheoretical issues (Stam, 2000) in the 1990s. In the era of nation-wide debates on the course of the country immediately after WWII, which reflected on and criticized the regime that brought about tremendous disaster in this country and in the other Asian-Pacific countries, there existed a few psychologists who took the Marxist position. But they didn't have significant influence on Japanese psychology. Without proposing new vista and new program for psychology, they were absorbed into mainstream psychology. From circa 1960, Japanese society had recovered from the ruins of war and enjoyed an economic booming. The new left student movement and psychology in Japan Immediately after WWII, student movements began to flourish with a strong sense of antimilitarism and of protest against oppression of human rights. It was natural that after the disaster which were brought about by the emperor’s bureaucratic militaristic government resulting in millions of loss of lives in Asian-Pacific area and dozens of loss of Japanese cities by US bombing, which included the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, not only students but also Japanese people in general developed strong anti-war and anti-militarism attitudes. This was the context within which social movements developed since 1945. In Japanese society, the anti-war atmosphere is still strong today5. But most of student movements were subject to the major leftist political parties such as the Japanese Communist Party and the Socialist Party. And the leftist parties were subjected to the policy of the leftist authority in foreign countries such as the USSR and the Chinese Communist Party. This situation was symmetrical to the conservative government’s total dependence on the policies of US government. Unfortunately, political factionalism and sectarianism were strong among the leftist parties. Sometime they spent more time and energy attacking each other than fighting the conservative government. In such circumstance, the leftist parties often treated student movements as a weapon for political strife to attack other factions within leftist parties. The authoritarianism of leftist parties was mirrored by the conservative government, bureaucracy, big businesses and academia. The new left student movement arose from this soil in the 1960s. There were many sects in the new left, and their founding ideologies were diverse. Some were Maoist, some were NeoMarxist, and some tried to change the Japanese society inspired by the Japanese leftist thinker, Takaaki Yoshimoto (born in 1924) who as poet, critic, and thinker emphasized the importance of aesthetic and moral revolution in the course of political struggle. Of course, their political aims were also not exactly the same. Sometime they antagonized each other. Later in early 1970s, their mutual-hate resulted in infighting and murders that led to people’s 5 Unfortunately, it seems that this anti-war atmosphere among Japanese has been based mainly on the sense of victimization by the war, not on the sense of victimizer who brought about the devastating war-disaster to people in Asian-Pacific area. 159 distrust and the decline of student movement in Japanese society. But the new left student movement left an important legacy in Japanese society. It was the claim of liberty to think and decide by oneself and not be dependent on any other higher authorities. Consciousness of freedom and autonomy, that was rare in Japanese culture, has deeply taken root in several quarters of the society. This heritage in the moral sphere could bring about change in society now and in the future. A considerable number of young psychologists were sympathetic to the new left student movement. They organised several meeting-groups and associations with colleagues. Among them, the most influential institution was the Japanese Research Association of Psychological Science (JRAPS), which was founded in 1969. Participants in JRAPS protested against authoritarianism in psychological society and in university. They especially opposed to the thoughtless application of psychological tests including intelligence tests in mental hospitals and schools. Thanks to such psychological measurements that had only slight scientific evidence, many clients and pupils were diagnosed as ‘abnormal’, ‘inferior’, ‘less developed’, and ‘feebleminded’. Such diagnosis and labelling directly resulted in great suffering and loss of life opportunities for clients and pupils. So they tried to reform institutions of psychological testing to ameliorate the suffering. In several western countries, especially in Britain (Henriques et al., 1984; Parker, 1999), turmoil of student movement in 1960s and 1970s prompted the birth of critical psychologies which are established as small but strong critical currents against mainstream psychology today. These currents propose alternative ways of doing research and practice. But JRAPS failed to establish critical psychology as a significant approach to subjectivity and the welfare of Japanese people. The JRAPS failed to recognize the importance of critical perspectives which have developed in social and human sciences since 1960s, namely post-structurism, critical theory of Frankfurt school, Lacanian psychoanalysis, feminism, and sociology of scientific knowledge and so on. It couldn’t assimilate these ideas, which played such a crucial role in nurturing critical psychologies in several western countries. Most members of JRAPS have no contact with the contemporary critical psychology movement around the world. And yet JRAPS exists today despite this lack of interest. Recently, it planned and published several edited books on peace psychology, the history of psychology and human development with some social-criticism. It is our aim to connect such activities of social-critique to the contemporary critical psychology movement around the world. Under the strong influence of the myth of neutrality of science, it has been a taboo for Japanese psychologists to talk about political and social issues. Broadly speaking, Japanese psychology after WWII, with the exception of the JRAPS, has not attempted to connect to social/societal needs. It has not developed relation to any social or political movements. 3. Reflexivity: Search for post-empirical research methods and change of social climate Since the early 1990s, strong critiques against mainstream positivistic psychology have arisen from several quarters within academia, especially from qualitative researchers (the Field Psychology Group) and from theoretical psychologists. The main reason for these critiques was the infertility of mainstream psychology. Thousands of psychologists produced tens of thousands of research reports (i.e., papers published in many journals specialized in psychology and innumerable number of presentations made at meetings of psychological societies) since the 1950s, but most of them were conducted following the model of NorthAmerican psychology. Such research activities have produced only a few significant works 160 that were relevant to Japanese people's lived experiences. A considerable number of Japanese psychologists began to question this infertility and began to search for ways to break the deadlock. Some of them gathered together to promote the adoption of qualitative research methods instead of quantitative research methods in psychological research. Some gathered to examine philosophical presuppositions and the history of psychology in pursuit of a better understanding of the foundation and background of mainstream psychology. In the 1990s, the social climate surrounding the discipline of psychology has changed drastically. Until recently, Japanese society didn’t care what academic psychologists did in universities and colleges. From the inception of neo-behaviorism, people did not have much interest in studies on topics of mainstream experimental psychology such as classical and instrumental conditioning in animal learning and cognition. This would be the same as in many other countries. But in Japan, even clinical psychology didn’t attract much attention until 1980s. Traditionally Japanese people preferred not to talk about their private worries to a third party such as a counsellor or psychotherapist. Such problems were solved in their small communities consisting of family members and friends in the context of thick interpersonal relationships between them. More severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia have been treated by psychiatrists with little contributions from clinical psychology. But this situation has changed recently. Japanese society was Americanised in the post-WWII era and the thick interpersonal relationships, which characterize collectivism in traditional Japanese society, are now weakening especially in urban areas. It is said that in these days traditional Japanese traits such as industriousness, humility and compassion are not as common. In the last two decades, the numbers of psychology-related problems such as school absenteeism, serious crimes by teenagers, child abuse by parents, domestic violence, social isolation, depression, and suicide have significantly increased. These problems have become serious pressing issues in society. Now Japanese society and governmental authorities expect psychology, which means clinical psychology for them, to treat these problems. In this context, it was clear that mainstream academic psychology was almost useless. It was necessary to promote clinical psychology and to create new institution to deliver psychological services. So in 1988, the Japanese Certification Board for Clinical Psychologist, (JCBCP), was founded with the full support of the Ministry of Education and has began to qualify Certified Clinical Psychologists (CCP). JCBCP had qualified 15,097 CCPs by 2006. CCPs work as counsellors, psychotherapists and diagnosticians in hospital. The educational authorities strongly promote CCPs and are planning to assign them to all elementary schools and junior high schools in the country. Now Certified Clinical Psychologists are widely recognized as professional psychologists and they have become major actors in the field of mental health in Japan. 4. Qualitative research and theoretical psychology as protest against mainstream psychology Today there exist several critical trends in Japanese psychology. Qualitative research is the strongest and the most promising critical psychological approach in Japan now. Moreover, small numbers of theoretical psychologists attempt to elucidate philosophical and social underpinnings of psychology in collaboration with philosophers and cognitive scientists. They try to find new methods to be used within the field. Below I will discuss their characteristics 161 briefly keeping the discussion in line with the questions posed by the editors of this special issue. . A. When and how did they emerge? Which “social/societal needs” do they correspond to? These new trends - qualitative research and meta-theoretical studies - arose in the 1990s. But they did not emerge as a direct response to some “social/societal needs”. They started their activities as a critique for the lack of productivity of mainstream positivistic psychology, which has dominated Japanese psychology since WWII. Japanese qualitative psychologists and some theoretical psychologists try to create new meta-theories and new methodologies with which one could do significant research. Research which investigates people’s real life experiences and subjectivities in their own context of everyday life and which can in turn contribute to welfare of these people B. What kind of social practices and interventions are proposed? Do they reflect the position and the role of their specific geo-political region in a world full of inequalities? The Japanese qualitative research movement has not developed directly in relation to any social and/or political movements, although in Japan there exist active and important social movements on human rights, peace, ecology, social welfare, and so on. It is possible, however, that from “field researches and research”, namely investigations completed within contexts where people live their lives and using qualitative methods, new social policy for education and for social welfare might be developed in the near future. Some community psychologists are working to help abused women and Japanese children left behind in China after WWII using the method of unstructured interviewing to understand their real life experience and their subjectivity in detail. To help vulnerable people, it is essential to know how they live in their everyday life context, so qualitative methods like participant-observation and open interviews are recommended instead of laboratory experimentation and ready-made questionnaires. For more than half a century, students majoring in psychology have been indoctrinated in classroom and laboratories into the myths of objectivity and neutrality of science (Gergen, 1994). They are taught that only objective methods of research such as experimentation could bring about true knowledge, and that to fulfill the requirements of objectivity, psychologists have to stay away from any ideologies that commit to social, political and religious values. As a consequence, most qualitative psychologists and even most theoretical psychologists do not have ample awareness that in a world full of inequalities the role of a psychologist can be that of an agent of societal change in Japan. Generally, Japanese psychologists do not reflect on their position and role in East Asia. C. Is there collaboration and/or exchange with other approaches of “critical psychology” in other geo-political regions of the world? Only few Japanese psychologists attend international meetings concerning critical psychology like the International Conference on Critical Psychology. Even qualitative researchers don’t know much about critical psychology. It is possible that qualitative research current in Japan has the potential to shift the course of Japanese psychology in the near future but this remains to be seen. It has already attracted many research and professional psychologists, not only from young generation of twenties and thirties but also from psychologists in their fifties, some of them might act as major players in this movement to change Japanese psychology. 162 Information on the contemporary critical psychology movement in the world is sorely needed in Japan and such interchange can promote understanding of other approaches like psychology of liberation (Martin-Baro, 1994), feminist psychology and the new history of psychology (Furumoto, 1989; Danziger, 1997). Recently, several Japanese psychologists interested in meta-theoretical issues in psychology attended the biennale conferences of the International Society for Theoretical Psychology (ISTP) and had exchanges with psychologists from other countries that includes not only English-speaking countries and other western countries, but also central and south American countries and countries of African continent. Exchanges at the 10th ISTP conference in Istanbul (2003) brought about the opportunity for the present author to write this article. D. Are the various approaches in critical psychology institutionally represented and/or organised? The journal Qualitative Psychology Research has been issued since 2002. This is the only high quality publication for psychological researches using qualitative methods. Mainstream psychology journals such as the Japanese Journal of Psychology do not accept qualitative research papers since the editorial boards of such journals are usually composed of researchers who favour quantitative methods and approaches. So a group of psychologists who recognize the importance of qualitative research, “Field Psychology Group”, started the new journal in 2002. Led by the same group of psychologists, the Japanese Society of Qualitative Psychology was founded in 2004. There are several small academic meetings on theoretical psychology (i.e., philosophy of psychology, history of psychology and sociology of psychology, and so on) that examine the current state of affairs of theories, practices, and institutions of psychology and explore new ways of investigating, practicing and teaching psychology. E. What is the theoretical and methodological background of the different approaches? For some Japanese qualitative psychologists, social constructionism (Gergen, 1994) serves the role of meta-theory and philosophy of psychology. It has essentially replaced the S-O-R schema of mainstream psychology, which explained mental phenomena as elicited by some external stimuli and viewed all behavior as a reflection of covert mental processes separated from social context. Some Japanese theoretical psychologists studied philosophical issues within psychology from the perspective of Sigmund Koch (1964, 1999), who was a pioneer and a leading scholar in philosophy of psychology since the 1940s, especially in the analysis of philosophical foundation of behaviorism. Likewise, the work of Amedio Giorgi (1970), who is the representative scholar of phenomenological psychology in North America since 1960s, has been influential. Bem & Looren de Jong’s well-known textbook of theoretical psychology, “Theoretical issues in psychology: An introduction” (1997) helped Japanese psychologists to catch up with contemporary research and trends. Having absorbed these theoretical critiques against mainstream positivistic psychology by western psychologists, Japanese theoretical psychologists, including the present author, are now better able to examine theories, practices, and institutions of Japanese psychology reflexively. 163 Table 2. Papers in “Qualitative Psychology Research” No. 1, 2002 1. Cognitive developmental stages of family caregivers for elderly people. By T. Tanaka, Y. Hyodo, and K. Tanaka. 2. How delinquent youth in a juvenile group home come to be seen as troublesome people: A study on the verbal interactions between the staff and delinquents in social skills training sessions. By H. Matsushima. 3. Constructing the meaning of “mild” motor disability from the viewpoint of life-span development: The life-stories of individuals between the severely disabled and the ablebodied. By M. Tagaki. 4. The narrative of nature, weather, and season in face of death: A model of the life story research to succeed previous hypotheses. By T. Saijo. 5. Why people mention the brightness of the sky and weather at the critical boundary of life and death: The generative cycle of hypothesizing and analyzing data in qualitative research. By Y. Yamada. 6. Description and analysis of various ways of being in adolescence. By T. Okura. 7. The process of model construction based on qualitative data in field psychology: Figurative model from image drawings of “This World and the Next World”. By Y. Yamada. 8. Are participants in environmental movements self-sacrificing?: Motivations for participation. By K. Ando. 5. Prospect for near future: Role of critical psychology in Japan Japanese society is changing. Many social institutions that were established in the era of recovery from the WWII aftermath and that brought about economic prosperity and social stability are in the process of being restructured by the neo-liberal polices of the conservative government. These policies stress and pursue economic efficiency. After the economic bubble burst in early 1990s, the Japanese economy has been in a depression for a long period. Due to the current harsh economic times, the social situation surrounding Japanese psychology is now changing rapidly. Under immense pressure from social and administrative demands to provide therapeutic and preventive treatments for psychology-related mental problems, psychologists have had to adopt a pragmatic attitude. Today, psychologists are required to prove their usefulness and competencies to society if they want to keep their jobs in academia and to get resources to do research. In these circumstances, we have to find the best ways to bring about a truly emancipating psychology that can contribute to the welfare of people in Japan and in other countries. The critiques against mainstream psychology, which have been put forth by qualitative psychologists and theoretical psychologists from self-reflexive standpoint, are an important step towards this aim. References Ando, K. 2002 Are participants in environmental movements self-sacrificing? Motivations for participation (In Japanese with English abstract). Qualitative Psychology Research, 1, 129-142. Bain, A. 1868 Mental science: A compendium of psychology, and the history of philosophy: Designed as a text-book for high-schools and colleges. New York: American Book Bem, S., & Looren de Jong, H. 1997 Theoretical issues in psychology: An introduction. London: Sage. Fox, D., & Prilleltensky, I. 1997 Critical Psychology : An introduction. London: Sage. 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