Politics of War Memory in Japan

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A01=Kamila Szczepanska
alternative narratives of wartime responsibility
Asia Pacific War
Asia-Pacific conflict legacies
Asian Solidarity Conference
Author_Kamila Szczepanska
Category=GTM
Category=JP
Category=NHF
civil
Civil Society
civil society activism
collective memory studies
comfort
Comfort Women
Commonwealth War Cemetery
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
grassroots political movements
historical revisionism
Japan's War Responsibility
Japan's Wartime Past
Japanese nationalism
japans
Japan’s War Responsibility
Japan’s Wartime Past
LDP Politician
Matsui Yayori
Middle School History Textbooks
Military Sexual Slavery
Murayama Statement
net
NHK Broadcasting Culture Research Institute
Nishino Rumiko
past
Pow Issue
progressive
Progressive Civil Society Groups
Revisionist Textbook
Social Reproduction
society
Tsukurukai Textbook
vaww
VAWW Net
VAWW Net Japan
War Memory
wartime
Wartime Past
women
Women's Active Museum
Women's International War Crimes
Women’s Active Museum

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138089419
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 May 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Since the 1990s, questions of Japanese wartime conduct, apologies for aggression, and compensation to former victims of the country’s imperial policies, have been brought to the fore of national and regional politics. The state is undoubtedly the most important actor in the process of memory production and along with conservative legislators and the grass-root revisionist movement there has been a consistent trend towards denying or undermining the existing acknowledgments of responsibility for Japan’s wartime past. However, to fully comprehend war memory in Japan, due attention must be paid to competing discourses that demand an alternative view, and only then can the complexity of Japanese war memory and attitudes towards the legacies of the Asia-Pacific war be understood.

The Politics of War Memory in Japan examines the involvement of five civil society actors in the struggle over remembering and addressing the wartime past in Japan today. In studying progressive war memory activists, it quickly becomes clear that the apologia by conservative politicians cannot be treated as representative of the opinion of the majority of the Japanese public. Indeed, this book seeks to remedy the disparity between studies devoted to the official level of addressing the ‘history issue’ and the grass-root historical revisionist movement on the one side, and progressive activism on the other. Furthermore, it contributes to scholarly debates on the state of civil society in Japan, challenging the characterisation of Japanese civil society as a depoliticised space by demonstrating a more contentious side of civil society activism.

Drawing important new empirical research, this book will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Japanese civil society, Japanese politics, Japanese history and memory in Japan.

Kamila Szczepanska is a Post-Doctoral Research Associate in the Institute of East Asian Politics at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany.

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