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This topic has appeared in the English Wikipedia rankings 1 time. It first appeared on 2026-05-09 and was most recently seen on 2026-05-09.
Wartime repression of Surrealism in Japan refers to the police surveillance, censorship, arrests, interrogations, confiscation of works and records, pressure on journals and associations, and wartime renaming or self-restraint that curtailed Japanese Surrealist activity in the late 1930s and early 1940s. The subject concerns the legal, police, and institutional pressures under which Surrealist writers, painters, critics, editors, and photographers worked, rather than the aesthetic development or broader movement history of Surrealism in Japan. Japanese Surrealism did not operate through a single national organization, but through poetry journals, painting associations, exhibitions, criticism, and photography circles. That dispersed structure meant that wartime pressure appeared in several forms, including arrests, detention, journal confiscation, police questioning, group renaming, and the adoption of less politically exposed terminology.
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