Excavating the Power of Memory in Japan

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collective memory studies
Contestation
Core International Crimes
cultural trauma analysis
Discourse
Ecological Knowledge
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Futenma Air Station
Futenma Base
Ingre
International Criminal Court Japan
Invisible Landscapes
Ise Bay
Japan
Japan's Accession
Japanese Folklore Studies
Japanese war memory
Japan’s Accession
Kamikaze
Kamikaze Missives
Kamikaze pilot letters
Kamikaze Pilots
Marine Corps Air Station
Marine Corps Air Station Futenma
Memory
Memory Politics
memory politics in Japanese society
Military Accidents
Military Tribunal
National Government Policy Makers
Okinawa
Okinawa International
Okinawa International University
Okinawa political history
Okinawa Taimuzu
Prefectural Peace Museum
Ryukyu Shimpo
SACO
Sea Stallion
UNESCO's Memory
UNESCO’s Memory
Unfinished War
War
Wind Names

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367023904
  • Weight: 230g
  • Dimensions: 189 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Sep 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Excavating the power of memory offers a succinct examination of how memory is constructed, embedded and disseminated in contemporary Japanese society. The unique range and perspective of this collection will provide an understanding not found elsewhere. It starts with a lucid introduction of how memory plays a political and wider social role in Japan. Four case studies follow. The first takes up the divergence in memory at the national and subnational levels by analysing the memory of the battle of Okinawa and US military accidents in Okinawa prefecture, illuminating how memory in the prefecture embeds Okinawans as victims of mainland Japan and of the United States. The second explores whether Japan’s membership of the International Criminal Court represents a shift in the Japanese government’s negative remembrance of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, demonstrating how both courts are largely portrayed as being disconnected in political debates. The third offers an analysis of the surviving letters of the Kamikaze pilots in order to interrogate and compare their presumed identity in the dominant collective memory and their own self-identities. The fourth untangles how the ‘memory of winds’ in Japanese fishing communities remains an expression of social thought that presides over the ‘transmission of meaning’ about fishermen's geographical surroundings. This book was previously published as a special issue of the Japan Forum.

Glenn D. Hook is Toshiba International Foundation Anniversary Research Professor in the School of East Asian Studies, University of Sheffield, UK. His recent publications include Regional risk and security in Japan: Whither the everyday (co-author, Routledge, 2015) and Japan's International Relations: Politics, Economics and Security, third edition, (co-author, Routledge, 2012).