ABSTRACT

This handbook explores trauma in East Asia from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century, assessing how victims, perpetrators and societies have responded to such experiences and to what extent the legacies still resonate today.

Mapping the trauma-scape of East Asia from an interdisciplinary perspective, including anthropologists, historians, film and literary critics, scholars of law, media and education, political scientists and sociologists, this book significantly enhances understandings of the region’s traumatic pasts and how those memories have since been suppressed, exhumed, represented and disputed. In Asia’s contested memory-scape there is much at stake for perpetrators, their victims and heirs to their respective traumas. The scholarly research in this volume examines the silencing and distortion of traumatic pasts and sustained efforts to interrogate denial and impunity in the search for accountability.

Addressing collective traumas from across East Asia (China, Hong Kong, Japan, Russia, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Vietnam), this book is a valuable resource for students and scholars of Trauma and Memory Studies, Asian Studies and Contemporary Asian History more broadly.

chapter 1|8 pages

Contesting and Commemorating Trauma in East Asia

An Introduction
ByTina Burrett

part Part 1|175 pages

Japan

chapter 2|12 pages

Surviving a World Destroyed

Existential Trauma in Hibakusha Experience
ByM.G. Sheftall

chapter 3|12 pages

Japanese Progressives, Asia, and Posttraumatic Growth

BySimon Avenell

chapter 4|14 pages

Trauma, Reconciliation, Social Justice and Artistic Commentary

Tomiyama Taeko's Strategies for Repair through Her Visual Art
ByLaura Hein

chapter 5|13 pages

Unwriting the Wrongs

History, Trauma and Memories of Violence in Germany and Japan
ByTessa Morris-Suzuki

chapter 6|11 pages

The West and the Dissemination of Japanese Historical Revisionism

ByKaroline Postel-Vinay

chapter 7|15 pages

Overcoming Trauma at Chidorigafuchi

Japan’s ‘National Cemetery' and the Legacies of the Asia-Pacific War
BySven Saaler, Collin Rusneac

chapter 8|10 pages

Telling Stories of War Trauma

Japan's Popular Manga
ByAkiko Hashimoto

chapter 9|12 pages

Back to the Future

Contested Wartime Trauma in Japanese Popular Culture
ByDavid McNeill

chapter 11|11 pages

Trauma in Japan's Hope

ByDavid Leheny

chapter 12|12 pages

Okinawa

The Trauma of Betrayal
ByAlexis Dudden, Jeff Kingston

chapter 14|11 pages

Memories and Displays of Japan's Early Industrialisation through the Production of Silk

Tomioka Silk Mill, Nomugi Pass and WWII Propaganda
ByTets Kimura

chapter 15|15 pages

Fukushima's Traumatic Legacies

ByJeff Kingston

part Part 2|75 pages

China/Hong Kong

chapter 16|12 pages

Hong Kong as Pillar of Shame

Trauma Foretold, Suppressed and Compounded
ByLouisa Lim

chapter 17|13 pages

The Nazi Holocaust in a Chinese Mirror

Shanghai's Jewish Refugees Museum
ByEdward Vickers

chapter 18|12 pages

Memory and Mythmaking

World War II in Chinese Cinema
ByMike Fu

chapter 19|13 pages

Martyrs, Military Heroes and Massacre Victims

The Complex Memorial Terrain of Lushun, 1894–Present
ByChristian A. Hess

chapter 20|13 pages

Narrating Trauma

Memories of the Atrocities under the Japanese Occupation of Sanzao Island
ByPeipei Qiu

part Part 3|40 pages

Taiwan

chapter 22|15 pages

Contested Memory in Taiwan's Jing-Mei White Terror Park

ByDominic Meng-Hsuan Yang

chapter 23|13 pages

Transitional Justice in Taiwan

Truth and Reconciliation in a Contested State
ByIan Rowen, Jamie Rowen

chapter 24|10 pages

Representing Taiwan's White Terror in Pop Culture

ByBrian Hioe

part Part 4|66 pages

South Korea

chapter 25|15 pages

Contesting Trauma in Court

Korean Historical Claims and Their Radiating Effects
ByCeleste L. Arrington

chapter 26|12 pages

Commemorative Witness

‘Gwangju in 1980’ and Unresolved Transitional Justice in Twenty-First Century South Korea
ByNan Kim

chapter 27|14 pages

The Politics of Forgetting

Unmaking Memories and Reacting to Memory-Place-Making
ByHaeRan Shin, Yerin Jin

chapter 28|12 pages

Cultural Trauma and the Cheju Massacre in Transnational Perspective

ByKim Seong Nae

chapter 29|11 pages

Commemorating and Contesting Gender-Based Violence in Korea

BySandra Fahy

part Part 5|49 pages

Wider East Asia

chapter 31|12 pages

Trauma – Prolonged and Accumulative

The Impact of Singapore Detention without Trial from the 1948 Malayan Emergency
ByAriel Yin Yee Yap

chapter 32|13 pages

East Asia's Vietnam

Trauma Returns and the Sub-Empire of Memory
ByLong T. Bui

chapter 33|8 pages

Wounds to the Soul

A View from Vietnam
ByHeonik Kwon