Tokyo Imperial University After graduating from college Kawakami attempted to meet
Kinoshita Naoe and gain a job at
The Mainichi, but his uncle refused to allow him to meet Naoe. , one of his university teachers, helped Kawakami become employed teaching agricultural economics in the faculty of agriculture. Biographers of Kawakami and Kawakami himself dismiss his early writings on economics, when he was influenced by the German school of nationalist economics, as unoriginal. The 1905 translation of
Edwin R. A. Seligman's
Economic Interpretation of History by Kawakami was praised by academics, including
Sakuzō Yoshino, and it brought attention to the concept of
economic determinism. Kawakami was the editor of the (
National Academic Society) magazine. He published his first book, (
Fundamental Principles of Political Economics), at his own expense in 1905.
Garden of Selflessness During Kawakami's studies he discovered the life of
Arnold Toynbee, an economics professor who quit his job to teach the poor in a slum district.
Leo Tolstoy's
My Religion made Kawakami feel "as though I had been struck by electricity". Several days after reading
My Religion Kawakami read the religious tract
Selfless Love by Itō Shōshin, the founder of the communal sect Garden of Selflessness (Muga En). He met with Itō three days later on 4 December 1905. Itō had trained for the priesthood of
Pure Land Buddhism, but he suffered a religious crisis that caused him to leave Pure Land Buddhism and form the Garden of Selflessness, which combined Buddhism, Christianity, and Tolstoy's
humanism, in
Sugamo in 1905. Kawakami met with Itō twice and was convinced to abandon economics for teaching philosophy. Under the pen name Zenzan Bansuirō, Kawakami wrote a series of articles for
Yomiuri titled (
Critique of socialism). The 36th installment of this was a public letter in which he revealed his true name and announced that he would proselytize the "truth of selfless love" rather than write. In December 1905, Kawakami resigned from his post to teach to the poor. He gave up his apartment and sold all of his books except for Tōson Shimazaki's
Young Greens. He lived with the Garden of Selflessness for two months and built a house near the main hall. Itō mentored Kawakami, but Kawakami soon came to disagree with him. Itō's idea of selfless love called for people to accept the world as it was which was in contrast to Kawakami's desire to reform society. On 6 February 1906, he left the sect and returned to Tokyo.
Kyoto Imperial University and Marxism An unemployed Kawakami became a journalist in 1907, and took over the magazine (
New Magazine of Japanese Economics) from Matsuzaki. A faculty member at
Kyoto Imperial University became ill and Kawakami accepted an offer to replace him in 1908. He became a lecturer at the university in 1908, and then an assistant professor in 1909.
Gail Lee Bernstein wrote that Kawakmai's time in Kyoto was the most tranquil time of his life. He translated books by
Irving Fisher and
Nicolaas Pierson during his first year in Kyoto. The
Ministry of Education awarded Kawakami a scholarship to study abroad in 1913, and he returned two years later. He sought to study
German idealism in Germany. He could not bring his family with him as the grant was too small. Sailing from
Kobe for two months he arrived in Brussels in January 1914, and then spent two months in Paris. Kawakami became more nationalist during his time in Paris and noted that the city flourished due to its tourism, but this caused the decadence of the city. During his time in Paris he was able to meet with Shimazaki several times. Kawakami was in Berlin for two months before being forced to leave on 15 August 1914, due to the outbreak of
World War I. He arrived in London on 18 August and remained there for two months for returning to Japan. He was promoted to professor in March 1915, and was elected as a Kyoto Imperial University councillor in May 1919. After returning to Japan Kawakami started work on a series of articles in
Asahi that would become (
Tale of Poverty). He was critical of wealth inequality in the west; Japanese economists viewed poverty as a sign of underdevelopment.
Ōuchi Hyōei stated that Kawakami's work told his generation of the existence of poverty in Japan. The book was a bestseller and was reprinted 30 times by 1919. Kushida Tamizo, a pupil of Kawakami, criticised his theory of poverty as laid out in
Tale of Poverty. Kawakami wrote that the wealthy purchasing luxury goods help caused poverty, but Tamizo believed it was due to the exploitation of the workers by capitalists and that individual morality could not solve poverty. Tamizo's criticism caused Kawakami to reconsider his beliefs. Kawakami started studying Marxism in 1919. His tenure at the university meant that he was able to study Marxism unlike other Japanese figures, such as
Hitoshi Yamakawa and
Sakai Toshihiko, who were censored. Material from
Das Kapital was added to his course in 1919, but he did not reorganise his lecture around
Karl Marx's writing until 1927. In January 1919, Kawakami started publishing his own journal, (
Research of Social Problems), and devoted the first ten issues to
historical materialism,
class warfare, and the
labor theory of value. The circulation of
Research of Social Problems rose to 20,000 by middle of the year. Kawakami faced censorship, such as his article on the
Russian Revolution of 1905 being censored after its publication in April 1921.
Research of Social Problems ended publication in 1926. Economics was within the law department of Kyoto Imperial University until it was given its own department in 1919. Kawakami was the chair of the faculty of economics until he resigned due to health reasons in 1924. The
Peace Preservation Law resulted in more students being arrested at Kyoto Imperial University than any other university and Kawakami's house was searched, but he was not arrested.
Suppression and prison Ikuo Oyama, a colleague that Kawakami wrote articles and journals with, ran as a
Labour-Farmer Party candidate in the
1928 Japanese general election. Kawakami helped campaign for Oyama during the election. Oyama lost, but , one of Kawakami's students, was elected to the
National Diet. After the election the Labour-Farmer Party was suppressed and left-wingers were suppressed across Japan's universities. Kawakami was fired from the university during the
March 15 incident for campaigning for Oyama. In December 1928, Kawakami attended a reorganisation of the Labour-Farmer Party in Tokyo, but he and other attendees were arrested. He was in a jail for half a day before being released. In February 1929, Kawakami was arrested at a meeting of the All-Nation Farmers' Union, but a group of people from the All-Nation Farmers' Union led by Diet member
Yamamoto Senji successfully demanded Kawakami's release. Senji was murdered by right-wingers on 5 March 1929, and Kawakami gave the funeral oration. The New Labour-Farmer Party () was established in November 1929, with Oyama as Central Committee chair and Kawakami as editor and financier of the party's newspapers. The party participated in the
1930 election and Kawakami moved to Tokyo one month before the election to aid the party's campaign and also ran as the party's candidate in Kyoto's 5th Ward. Kawakami lost, but Oyama was elected. However, Kawakami became disillusioned with the party as he knew that Oyama was not a communist. The
Communist International called for the
Japanese Communist Party to be reformed. In 1930, Kawakami proposed that the New Labour-Farmer Party be dissolved so that its members could join the Communist Party. Kawakami stated that breaking from Oyama was "one of the most despairing periods of my whole career." Kawakami joined the Communist Party in October 1932. Kawakami worked on a translation of
Das Kapital for multiple years before its publication in 1931. He used
royalty payments from the book to fund the Communist Party. The Communist International had Kawakami translate
Theses in 1932, and it was published in
Shimbun Akahata using the pseudonym Honda Kōzō. On 8 August 1932, Kawakami was alerted by his brother-in-law Otsuka Yusho of an incoming police raid against Communist Party members. For the next four months Kawakami used multiple party hiding places while serving as editor of
Shimbun Akahata. On 6 October 1932, Otsuka participated in the
Omori bank robbery to gain funds for the party. Otsuka avoided arrest, but ended his direct contact with Kawakami due to manhunt for him. Matsumura Noburu was made the intermediary between Kawakami and the party. Matsumura was an agent for the government. Otsuka was arrested after a meeting with Matsumura on 5 January 1933. Otsuka, knowing that Matsumura was an informant, determined it was pointless to continue hiding Kawakami. He informed the police of Kawakami's location in exchange for being allowed to send a note to him. Kawakami was arrested without incident after hiding for 122 days. In August 1933, Kawakami was convicted for violating the Peace Preservation Law and sentenced to five years' imprisonment. Many imprisoned communists recanted their beliefs, such as , but Kawakami did not. He was released from prison on 15 June 1937. During his time in prison he suffered from malnutrition and chronic stomach ailments. After being released from prison Kawakami spent the remainder of his life writing poetry and an autobiography.
On the Death Bed, a poem by Kawakami and his last work, was published in
Shimbun Akahata shortly before his death. On 30 January 1946, Kawakami died in Kyoto. ==Legacy==