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E-grāmata: Shadows of Nagasaki: Trauma, Religion, and Memory after the Atomic Bombing

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A critical introduction to how the Nagasaki atomic bombing has been remembered, especially in contrast to that of Hiroshima.

In the decades following the atomic bombing of Nagasaki on August 9, 1945, the city’s residents processed their trauma and formed narratives of the destruction and reconstruction in ways that reflected their regional history and social makeup. In doing so, they created a multi-layered urban identity as an atomic-bombed city that differed markedly from Hiroshima’s image. Shadows of Nagasaki traces how Nagasaki’s trauma, history, and memory of the bombing manifested through some of the city’s many post-atomic memoryscapes, such as literature, religious discourse, art, historical landmarks, commemorative spaces, and architecture. In addition, the book pays particular attention to how the city’s history of international culture, exemplified best perhaps by the region’s Christian (especially Catholic) past, informed its response to the atomic trauma and shaped its postwar urban identity. Key historical actors in the volume’s chapters include writers, Japanese- Catholic leaders, atomic-bombing survivors (known as hibakusha), municipal officials, American occupation personnel, peace activists, artists, and architects. The story of how these diverse groups of people processed and participated in the discourse surrounding the legacies of Nagasaki’s bomb­ing shows how regional history, culture, and politics—rather than national ones—become the most influential factors shaping narratives of destruction and reconstruction after mass trauma. In turn, and especially in the case of urban destruction, new identities emerge and old ones are rekindled, not to serve national politics or social interests but to bolster narratives that reflect local circumstances.

Note on Japanese Names xi
Introduction: Imagining Nagasaki: Religion and History in Postatomic
Memoryscapes
Chad R. Diehl 1
Part I: Catholic Responses
The "Saint" of Urakami: Nagai Takashi and Early Representations of the
Atomic Experience
Chad R. Diehl 33
Loving Your Neighbor across the Sea:
The Reception of the Work of Nagai Takashi in the Republic of Korea
Haeseong Park and Franklin Rausch 70
Faith, Family, Earth, and the Atomic Bomb in the Art of Nagai Takashi
Anthony Richard Haynes 93
"Love Saves from Isolation": Ozaki ToÅmei and His Journey from Nagasaki to
Auschwitz and Back
Gwyn McClelland 112
Part II: Literature and Testimony
"Nagasaki" in Akutagawa Ryu±nosuke's Taisho-Era Literary Imagination
Anri Yasuda 131
Lambs of God, Ravens of Death, Rafts of Corpses:
Three Visions of Trauma in Nagasaki Survivor Poetry
Chad R. Diehl 151
Listening to the Dead and Filling the Void: The Prayer and Activism of
Akizuki Tatsuichiro
Maika Nakao 179
Breaking New Ground in Nagasaki: Seirai Yuichi's Ground Zero Literature
Michele M. Mason 191
Part III: Sites of Memory
Fragmented Memory:
The Scattering of the Urakami Cathedral Ruins among Nagasaki's Memorial
Landscape
Anna Gasha 215
One Fine Day: The Allied Occupation of Nagasaki and "Madame Butterfly
House"
Brian Burke-Gaffney 243
The Titan and the Arch:Regulating Public Memory through the Peace Statue
Nanase Shirokawa 264
Part IV: Reflections
How I Came to Criticize Nagai Takashi's Urakami Holocaust Theory
Shinji Takahashi 295
On Rereleasing The Bells of Nagasaki to the World
Tokusaburo Nagai 312
Acknowledgments 319
List of Contributors 323
Index 327
Chad R. Diehl received his PhD from the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Columbia University in 2011, specializing in modern Japanese history. He has researched the atomic bombing of Nagasaki and its aftermath since 2003 and published his first monograph, Resurrecting Nagasaki: Reconstruction and the Formation of Atomic Narratives, with Cornell University Press in 2018.