ABSTRACT

This book clarifies and verifies the role sport has as an alternative marker in understanding and mapping memory in Japan, by applying the concept of lieux de mémoire (realms of memory) to sport in Japan. Japanese history and national construction have not been short of sports landmarks since the end of the nineteenth century. Western-style sports were introduced into Japan in order to modernize the country and develop a culture of consciousness about bodies resembling that of the Western world. Japan’s modernization has been a process of embracing Western thought and culture while at the same time attempting to establish what distinguishes Japan from the West. In this context, sports functioned as sites of contested identities and memories. The Olympics, baseball and soccer have produced memories in Japan, but so too have martial arts, which by their very name signify an attempt to create traditions beyond Western sports. Because modern sports form bodies of modern citizens and, at the same time, offer countless opportunities for competition with other nations, they provide an excellent ground for testing and contesting national identifications. By revealing some of the key realms of memory in the Japanese field of sports, this book shows how memories and counter-memories of (sport) moments, places, and heroes constitute an inventory for identity.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Sport in Society.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Remembering the glory days of the nation: sport as lieu de mémoire in Japan

chapter |14 pages

Swimming into memory

The Los Angeles Olympics (1932) as Japanese lieu de mémoire

chapter |10 pages

Remember to get back on your feet quickly

The Japanese women's volleyball team at the 1964 Olympics as a ‘Realm of Memory’

chapter |13 pages

Kōshien Stadium

Performing national virtues and regional rivalries in a ‘theatre of sport'

chapter |14 pages

‘By running… / by fighting… / by dying… '

Remembering, glorifying, and forgetting Japanese Olympian war dead

chapter |14 pages

‘It was October 1964, when I met the demon for the first time'

Supo-kon manga as lieux de mémoire

chapter |11 pages

Sports sites of memory in Japan's cultures of remembrance and oblivion

Collective remembrance is like swimming – in order to stay afloat you have to keep moving 1