Challenging Nuclear Pacifism in Japan
eBook - ePub

Challenging Nuclear Pacifism in Japan

Hiroshima's Anti-nuclear Social Movements

  1. 252 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Challenging Nuclear Pacifism in Japan

Hiroshima's Anti-nuclear Social Movements

About this book

Is Japan abandoning its pacifism? The Japanese government has claimed it is doubling its defense spending and has announced a plan to equip itself with the capability to "counterattack" enemy bases overseas, a departure from the nation's postwar consensus. Shedding new light on Japan's pacifism and Hiroshima's role in it, Yuasa investigates the events of postwar Japan and how it catalyzed a range of challenges to public sentiment.

Japan's Constitution stipulates the renunciation of war and forbids using force to settle international disputes. This radical shift has been led by Fumio Kishida, the prime minister, whose constituency is Hiroshima, the atomic-bombed city symbolizing Japan's postwar pacifism. This book is about Hiroshima's local nuclear politics and popular consciousness about pacifism. Based on published and unpublished local documents and participant observation, it describes how postwar global and national power has formulated local politics and discusses the impact of local struggles on national and global politics. The key concept is "imaginary". Institutionalized imaginary effectively channels people's suppressed desires and emotions into coordinated action in the society. The current political crossroad of Hiroshima and Japan is interpreted as a terrain constructed over the last half century by three paradoxically coexisting and competing pacifist imaginaries, namely constitutional, anti-nuclear, and nuclear pacifism. They were, however, significantly destabilized by the Fukushima nuclear disaster and a newly invented "proactive pacifism".

This book is an essential reading for scholars and students interested in Japanese postwar history and nuclear issues in general.

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Yes, you can access Challenging Nuclear Pacifism in Japan by Masae Yuasa in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Politics & International Relations & Regional Studies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Series
  4. Title
  5. Copyright
  6. Contents
  7. List of abbreviations
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Introduction: competing and merging pacifist imaginaries in postwar Japan
  10. 1 Emerging constitutional pacifism
  11. 2 Lucky Dragon No. 5 incident and anti-nuclear and nuclear pacifism
  12. 3 Survivors’ parallel worlds
  13. 4 Start of Hiroshima’s anti-nuclear movement and Moritaki’s anti-nuclear imaginary
  14. 5 Movement to save survivors
  15. 6 Peace administration and institutionalized Hiroshima Heart
  16. 7 Hibakusha as storytellers
  17. 8 Hibakusha self-help movement challenging the state aid regime
  18. 9 Anti-nuclear power movement
  19. 10 Reviving constitutional pacifism in Hiroshima
  20. 11 Fukushima accident and its impact on Hiroshima
  21. 12 Post-Fukushima Hiroshima movements challenging Hiroshima pacifism
  22. 13 Hiroshima caught between proactive pacifism and the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons
  23. Conclusion: pacifism as imaginary and institution
  24. Index