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Legacies of the Asia-Pacific War : the Yakeato generation / edited by Roman Rosenbaum and Yasuko Claremont.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Routledge contemporary Japan series ; v. 31.Publication details: New York : Routledge, 2011.Description: 1 online resource (xiii, 251 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780203846711
  • 0203846710
  • 9781136936227
  • 113693622X
  • 1283607344
  • 9781283607346
  • 9786613919793
  • 6613919799
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Legacies of the Asia-Pacific War.DDC classification:
  • 306.0952/09045 22
LOC classification:
  • HN723.5 .L447 2011eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: pt. I Setting the stage for the yakeato generation -- 1. Legacies of the Asia-Pacific War: the yakeato (the burnt-out ruins) generation / Roman Rosenbaum -- 2. Nihon ni okeru kyo no sengoron: current post-war discourse in Japan / Suzuki Sadami -- pt. II Pre-yakeato: provenance of a generation to come -- 3. Ohara Tomie and A Woman Called En / Hiroko Kobayashi -- 4. The legacy of Watanabe Kazuo (1901 -- 1975) / Yasuko Claremont -- pt. III The yakeato cohort: offspring of war -- 5. The legacy of the yakeato generation: Oda Makoto's literary social criticism / Roman Rosenbaum -- 6. A yakeato poet: Irisawa Yasuo / Yasuko Claremont.
Summary: When we look in detail at the various peripheral groups of disenfranchised people emerging from the aftermath of the Asia-Pacific War the list is startling: Koreans in Japan (migrants or forced labourers), Burakumin, Hibakusha, Okinawans, Asian minorities, comfort women and many others. Many of these groups have been discussed in a large corpus of what we may call 'disenfranchised literature', and the research presented in this book intends to add an additional and particularly controversial example to the long list of the voice- and powerless. The presence of members of what is known as the yakeato sedai or the generation of people who experienced the fire-bombings of the Asia-Pacific War is conspicuous in all areas of contemporary Japan. From literature to the visual arts, from music to theatre, from architecture to politics, their influence and in many cases guiding principles is evident everywhere and in many cases forms the keystone of modern Japanese society and culture. The contributors to this book explore the impact of the yakeato generation - and their literary, creative and cultural and works - on the postwar period by drawing out the importance of the legacy of those people who truly survived the darkest hour of the twentieth century and re-evaluate the ramifications of their experiences in contemporary Japanese society and culture. As such this book will be of huge interest to those studying Japanese history, literature, poetry and cultural studies. /from the publisher's website.
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Includes bibliographical references.

When we look in detail at the various peripheral groups of disenfranchised people emerging from the aftermath of the Asia-Pacific War the list is startling: Koreans in Japan (migrants or forced labourers), Burakumin, Hibakusha, Okinawans, Asian minorities, comfort women and many others. Many of these groups have been discussed in a large corpus of what we may call 'disenfranchised literature', and the research presented in this book intends to add an additional and particularly controversial example to the long list of the voice- and powerless. The presence of members of what is known as the yakeato sedai or the generation of people who experienced the fire-bombings of the Asia-Pacific War is conspicuous in all areas of contemporary Japan. From literature to the visual arts, from music to theatre, from architecture to politics, their influence and in many cases guiding principles is evident everywhere and in many cases forms the keystone of modern Japanese society and culture. The contributors to this book explore the impact of the yakeato generation - and their literary, creative and cultural and works - on the postwar period by drawing out the importance of the legacy of those people who truly survived the darkest hour of the twentieth century and re-evaluate the ramifications of their experiences in contemporary Japanese society and culture. As such this book will be of huge interest to those studying Japanese history, literature, poetry and cultural studies. /from the publisher's website.

Machine generated contents note: pt. I Setting the stage for the yakeato generation -- 1. Legacies of the Asia-Pacific War: the yakeato (the burnt-out ruins) generation / Roman Rosenbaum -- 2. Nihon ni okeru kyo no sengoron: current post-war discourse in Japan / Suzuki Sadami -- pt. II Pre-yakeato: provenance of a generation to come -- 3. Ohara Tomie and A Woman Called En / Hiroko Kobayashi -- 4. The legacy of Watanabe Kazuo (1901 -- 1975) / Yasuko Claremont -- pt. III The yakeato cohort: offspring of war -- 5. The legacy of the yakeato generation: Oda Makoto's literary social criticism / Roman Rosenbaum -- 6. A yakeato poet: Irisawa Yasuo / Yasuko Claremont.

Print version record.

English.

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