TY - JOUR
T1 - Anomalies in Collective Victimhood in Post-War Japan
T2 - ‘Hiroshima’ As a Victimisation Symbol for the Collective National Memory of War
AU - Uesugi, Yuji
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 School of Humanities and Social Sciences, UNSW Canberra.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - In the aftermath of war, people need visions that (re)unite them and overcome the psychological wounds they have incurred. The post-war Japanese needed narratives that could help them to rebuild their war-torn self-image. They subscribed to a story of Hiroshima being the first city to be demolished by an atomic bomb. Through this, Hiroshima became a national symbol, and the Japanese regarded themselves as victims of war, which effectively overrode their sense of shame and of responsibility for the war. As this process was aimed internally to serve as the backbone of post-war recovery, it did not turn the Japanese against the United States, and thus Japanese collective victimhood includes the following three anomalies: first, the absence of an enemy; second, a lack of aggressiveness; and third, the irrelevance of recovery. This article, therefore, challenges the existing theory of collective victimhood using the case of post-war Japan.
AB - In the aftermath of war, people need visions that (re)unite them and overcome the psychological wounds they have incurred. The post-war Japanese needed narratives that could help them to rebuild their war-torn self-image. They subscribed to a story of Hiroshima being the first city to be demolished by an atomic bomb. Through this, Hiroshima became a national symbol, and the Japanese regarded themselves as victims of war, which effectively overrode their sense of shame and of responsibility for the war. As this process was aimed internally to serve as the backbone of post-war recovery, it did not turn the Japanese against the United States, and thus Japanese collective victimhood includes the following three anomalies: first, the absence of an enemy; second, a lack of aggressiveness; and third, the irrelevance of recovery. This article, therefore, challenges the existing theory of collective victimhood using the case of post-war Japan.
KW - atomic bomb
KW - collective victimhood
KW - Hiroshima
KW - reconciliation
KW - war memory
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U2 - 10.1080/07292473.2023.2273034
DO - 10.1080/07292473.2023.2273034
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85174586974
SN - 0729-2473
JO - War & society
JF - War & society
ER -