Japan's Contested War Memories

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collective memory theory
comfort
Comfort Women
contested wartime remembrance Japan
Dominant Cultural Memory
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Japan's Contested War Memories
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Japanese historical consciousness
Japanese Victimhood
Japanese War Films
Japanese War Memories
Japanese War Responsibility
LDP
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Opinion Magazines
Peace Museum
Popular Memory Approach
Popular Memory Group
postwar memory studies
Prime Ministerial Apologies
regional war narratives
responsibility
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Tokyo Air Raid
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war commemoration practices
War Memories
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780415399159
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Feb 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Japan's Contested War Memories is an important and significant book that explores the struggles within contemporary Japanese society to come to terms with Second World War history. Focusing particularly on 1972 onwards, the period starts with the normalization of relations with China and the return of Okinawa to Japan in 1972, and ends with the sixtieth anniversary commemorations.

Analyzing the variety of ways in which the Japanese people narrate, contest and interpret the past, the book is also a major critique of the way the subject has been treated in much of the English-language. Philip Seaton concludes that war history in Japan today is more divisive and widely argued over than in any of the other major Second World War combatant nations. Providing a sharp contrast to the many orthodox statements about Japanese 'ignorance', amnesia' and 'denial' about the war, this is an engaging and illuminating study that will appeal to scholars and students of Japanese history, politics, cultural studies, society and memory theory.

Philip A. Seaton is an Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Media and Communication, Hokkaido University, Japan. His webpage, which contains links to many online resources and an online appendix, is www.philipseaton.net.

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