Description

Book Synopsis
Contains essays offering a look at the history of Japan during the Asia-Pacific War. This book provides an intimate account of the scars of war. It also includes personal anecdotes.

Trade Review
Readers can see the real picture of what Japan's intelligentsia experienced and what their thoughts were in those days. The essays are superbly well translated. A must. . . . Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. * CHOICE *
The essays Minear has selected and masterfully translated for this volume testify to the workings of a splendid mind in search of understanding a world in turmoil. * The Japan Times *
Historians now think of World War II not just in terms of battlefield winners and losers but also as an event that transformed civilian lives and national societies in profound ways. Richard Minear brings us one eloquent, thoughtful chronicler of these transformations, reminding us of the varied and distinctive ways Japanese people coped with the many meanings of the wartime and après-guerre eras. Takeyama Michio was cantankerous, elitist, and contrary but also someone who intelligently and passionately searched for his own way to make sense of the turbulent times in which he lived. -- Laura Hein, Northwestern University
A masterful translation of ten essays by one of postwar Japan’s most interesting thinkers, this work ought to dispel our simplistic notions of Japan as a nation of unthinking followers during World War II. The complexity—and sharp turnings—of Takeyama’s own ideas are troubling and provocative. And his vivid descriptions of ordinary people during the war—housewives stealing food to feed their hungry children, pampered and hedonistic Higher School boys scandalizing patriotic Hitachi factory workers, soldiers in China dying of boredom rather than battle—make the war somberly, but richly, human. -- James L. Huffman, Wittenberg University
No one has been as assiduous as Richard Minear in pursuing the hard moral questions of World War II—on both sides of the Pacific. This portrait of a committed humanist under simultaneous siege by enemy bombs and his own country's rabid nationalism is both startling and heartbreaking. -- Jay Rubin, Harvard University

Table of Contents
Introduction: Takeyama Michio, 1904–1981, by Richard H. Minear The Writings Part I: The War Ichiko in 1944 (1946) The End of the War (1953) White Pine and Rose (1947) Scars (1949) Part II: Crisis and Challenge Germany—New Middle Ages? (1940) The Younger Generation (1945) Part III: The Tokyo Trial The Trial of Mr. Hyde (1946) Letter to Judge Röling (1949) Part IV: Turn to the Right The Student Incident: Observations and Reflections (1950) Those Who Refuse to Enter the Gate—Thoughts on One Contemporary Frame of Mind (1951)

The Scars of War Tokyo during World War II

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    A Paperback / softback by Richard H. Minear

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 09/07/2007
      ISBN13: 9780742554801, 978-0742554801
      ISBN10: 0742554805
      Also in:
      Second World War

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Contains essays offering a look at the history of Japan during the Asia-Pacific War. This book provides an intimate account of the scars of war. It also includes personal anecdotes.

      Trade Review
      Readers can see the real picture of what Japan's intelligentsia experienced and what their thoughts were in those days. The essays are superbly well translated. A must. . . . Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. * CHOICE *
      The essays Minear has selected and masterfully translated for this volume testify to the workings of a splendid mind in search of understanding a world in turmoil. * The Japan Times *
      Historians now think of World War II not just in terms of battlefield winners and losers but also as an event that transformed civilian lives and national societies in profound ways. Richard Minear brings us one eloquent, thoughtful chronicler of these transformations, reminding us of the varied and distinctive ways Japanese people coped with the many meanings of the wartime and après-guerre eras. Takeyama Michio was cantankerous, elitist, and contrary but also someone who intelligently and passionately searched for his own way to make sense of the turbulent times in which he lived. -- Laura Hein, Northwestern University
      A masterful translation of ten essays by one of postwar Japan’s most interesting thinkers, this work ought to dispel our simplistic notions of Japan as a nation of unthinking followers during World War II. The complexity—and sharp turnings—of Takeyama’s own ideas are troubling and provocative. And his vivid descriptions of ordinary people during the war—housewives stealing food to feed their hungry children, pampered and hedonistic Higher School boys scandalizing patriotic Hitachi factory workers, soldiers in China dying of boredom rather than battle—make the war somberly, but richly, human. -- James L. Huffman, Wittenberg University
      No one has been as assiduous as Richard Minear in pursuing the hard moral questions of World War II—on both sides of the Pacific. This portrait of a committed humanist under simultaneous siege by enemy bombs and his own country's rabid nationalism is both startling and heartbreaking. -- Jay Rubin, Harvard University

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Takeyama Michio, 1904–1981, by Richard H. Minear The Writings Part I: The War Ichiko in 1944 (1946) The End of the War (1953) White Pine and Rose (1947) Scars (1949) Part II: Crisis and Challenge Germany—New Middle Ages? (1940) The Younger Generation (1945) Part III: The Tokyo Trial The Trial of Mr. Hyde (1946) Letter to Judge Röling (1949) Part IV: Turn to the Right The Student Incident: Observations and Reflections (1950) Those Who Refuse to Enter the Gate—Thoughts on One Contemporary Frame of Mind (1951)

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