Eitaro Noro: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Prisoners who died in Japanese detention]]

[[Category:Prisoners who died in Japanese detention]]

[[Category:Japanese economic historians]]

[[Category:Japanese economic historians]]

[[Category:Academics from Hokkaido]]


Latest revision as of 12:58, 14 September 2025

Japanese economist (1900–1934)

Eitaro Noro

Died 19 February 1934(1934-02-19) (aged 33)
Nationality Japanese
Known for Marxism, Japanese Capitalism
Thesis The historical development of Japanese capitalism (1926)
Discipline Political science
Sub-discipline Japanese economics
Institutions Industrial Labour Research Institute

Eitaro Noro (野呂 榮太郎, Noro Eitarō; 1900–1934) was a Japanese economic historian. Noro was born in Hokkaido in 1900. He studied at Keio Gijuku University, where he first became involved in radical politics. He worked for a labour research institute following graduation. In 1930 he joined the Japanese Communist Party. He was instrumental in laying the foundations for the Koza school, a branch of Japanese Marxist thought.[1]

Noro was arrested in November 1933. He died on 19 February 1934, in Shinagawa Police Station.[2] His death was the result of police torture.[1]

  • Nihon Shihonshugi Hattatsushi (History of the Development of Japanese Capitalism) (1930)

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