Marotti's detailed analysis of the Japanese artists' evolution from surrealist sensibility to interventionist action contributes immensely to our understanding of how the political aesthetic so characteristic of the 1960s emerged simultaneously in numerous countries. A vivid, highly informed and richly rewarding investigation of art and politics under post-1945 capitalism in Japan. -- Justin Jesty * Art in America *
William Marotti explicates the social and political context of the Yomiuri Independent avant-garde. . . . [A] remarkably detailed and vivid view of the activities of Akasegawa and his circle. -- Mark Schilling * Japan Times *
[An] innovative, carefully crafted interdisciplinary history of the cultural origins of Japans 1968. . . . Appropriate to its rich and diverse visual subject matter, it is also beautifully illustrated and produced. Its provocative interrogation of conventional scholarly boundaries of discipline, chronology, narrative, and ontology, at the level not only of theory but also of practice, suggests a kinship with the efforts of the artists whose story it so carefully and sympathetically excavates. -- Ethan Mark * American Historical Review *
None of these art interventions documented in Money, Trains and Guillotines are fully understandable without the background of the politics of the time, and the author skillfully presents both art and politics, focused and interwoven. Author William Marotti's twenty-year effort has produced a fine book. -- Mike Mosher * Leonardo Reviews *
"Marottis subtle readings of these texts, underappreciated in Japanese scholarship, make a strong case for their importance within art history. Money, Trains, and Guillotines not onlyfills in a major gap within English-language understanding of postwar Japanese art. Once translated into Japanesewhich it should be, promptlyit should sharpen the discourse within Akasegawas home country." -- Kenji Kajiya * Pacific Affairs *
William Marottis book is a landmark study of political art and the politics of artistic expression in contemporary Japan. . . . Marotti uncovers a fascinating, provocative, and sometimes-shocking history of political art. . .. Marottis attention to detail and to the emotional life of his subjects is truly engrossing in the best traditions of microhistory. . . . [T]his is a richly documented, thoughtprovoking, and marvelously sculptured piece of scholarship that will be immensely enriching for anyone interested in issues of constitutional freedoms, artistic expression, and the intersection of politics and the everyday in postwar Japan. -- Simon Avenell * Journal of Japanese Studies *
"This book will form a major addition to my teaching, providing an important counter-balance to the dominant narrative of a postwar Japan marching in drumbeat towards a capitalist future. In illuminating the ways in which culture and radical politics were enmeshed at this key juncture of postwar Japanese history, Marotti highlights the importance of the everyday as 'the central political arena for dissent and for policing.'" -- Mark Pendleton * Journal of Asian Studies *