1st Edition

Tourism and Difficult Histories in Japan

By Richard Sharpley, Kumi Kato Copyright 2026
220 Pages 26 Color & 34 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

220 Pages 26 Color & 34 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book explores the relationship between tourism and difficult histories in Japan. More specifically, it considers the manner in which places associated with past dark events are presented and interpreted for tourists. In so doing, it seeks to identify the extent to which tourism contributes to enhancing mutual understanding as a stated objective of Japanese tourism policy. The book presents... Read more

1. Introduction: Tourism and difficult histories in Japan – a pathway to reconciliation? 2. From poison gas to rabbits: Ōkunoshima 3. Discovering the hidden Christians 4. Gunkanjima: Hiding a dark history? 5. Commemorating suicide pilots: Kamikaze and kaiten tourism 6. Okinawa: A continuing difficult history? 7. Atomic bomb tourism: Hiroshima and Nagasaki 8. Japan’s leprosy sanatoriums: Reconciling a difficult past 9. Fukushima: Reconstruction and hope 10. PoWs of Kishu Copper Mine: From commemoration to reconciliation? 11. Final thoughts

Biography

Richard Sharpley is Emeritus Professor of Tourism at the University of Lancashire, UK, and Visiting Professor at Wakayama University, Japan.

Kumi Kato is Professor in the Faculty of Tourism at Wakayama University and at the Creating Happiness Incubation institute, Musashino University, Japan.