With luminous prose, unflinching frankness, and conceptual lucidity, Christopher T. Nelson carefully recounts tales of Okinawa that shatter our smooth platitudes about trauma and memory, about perpetrators and victims, to reveal their blind spot: the immanence of war to everyday life. As devastating in its insights as it is generous in its engagement, When the Bones Speak not only admits ghosts to walk the earth; it lets them protest: why must the living continue to haunt them? - Thomas Lamarre, author of The Anime Ecology: A Genealogy of Television, Animation, and Game Media
With acute attention to textures of everyday life and experience, Christopher T. Nelson writes himself in and through Okinawas landscapes of loss, mourning, and sacrifice, activating a deep knowledge of Okinawan (and Japanese) history, anthropology, folklore studies, theater, architecture, and film. This book is a tour-de-force of sustained ethnographic description, ethical reflection, and theoretical verve, beautifully written. - Marilyn Ivy, author of Discourses of the Vanishing: Modernity, Phantasm, Japan