1st Edition

East Asia Beyond the History Wars Confronting the Ghosts of Violence

    224 Pages 17 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    224 Pages 17 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    East Asia is now the world’s economic powerhouse, but ghosts of history continue to trouble relations between the key countries of the region, particularly between Japan, China and the two Koreas. Unhappy legacies of Japan’s military expansion in pre-war Asia prompt on-going calls for apologies, while conflicts over ownership of cultural heritage cause friction between China and Korea, and no peace treaty has ever been signed to conclude the Korean War.

    For over a decade, the region’s governments and non-government groups have sought to confront the ghosts of the past by developing paths to reconciliation. Focusing particularly on popular culture and grassroots action, East Asia beyond the History Wars explores these East Asian approaches to historical reconciliation. This book examines how Korean historians from North and South exchange ideas about national history, how Chinese film-makers reframe their views of the war with Japan, and how Japanese social activists develop grassroots reconciliation projects with counterparts from Korea and elsewhere. As the volume’s studies of museums, monuments and memorials show, East Asian public images of modern history are changing, but change is fragile and uncertain. This unfinished story of East Asia’s search for historical reconciliation has important implications for the study of popular memory worldwide.

    Presenting a fresh perspective on reconciliation which draws on both history and cultural studies, this book will be welcomed by students and scholars working in the fields of Asian history, Asian culture and society as well as those interested in war and memory studies more generally.

    Introduction: Confronting the Ghosts of War in East Asia, Tessa Morris-Suzuki  PART I: Reconciliation as Method 1. On the Frontiers of History: Territory and cross-border dialogue in East Asia, Leonid Petrov and Tessa Morris-Suzuki 2. Historiography, Media and Cross-Border Dialogue in Korea: Korea's uncertain path to reconciliation, Leonid Petrov 3.Reconciliation Onscreen: The Second Sino-Japanese War in Chinese War Movies, Timothy Tsu 4. Letters to the Dead: Grassroots historical dialogue in East Asia's borderlands, Tessa Morris-Suzuki PART II: Re-Framing Memories 5. Gender and Representations of the War in Tokyo Museums, Morris Low 6. Remembering the Unfinished Conflict: Museums and the Contested Memory of the Korean War, Tessa Morris-Suzuki 7. Art, Photography and Remembering Hiroshima, Morris Low 8. Heroes, Collaborators and Survivors: Korean kamikaze pilots and the ghosts of war in Japan and Korea, Tessa Morris-Suzuki

    Biography

    Tessa Morris-Suzuki is Professor of Japanese History at the Australian National University.

    Morris Low is Associate Professor of Japanese History at the University of Queensland, Australia.

    Leonid Petrov is a former Chair of Korean Studies at Sciences Po (Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris) and teaches Korean History and Language at the University of Sydney, Australia.

    Timothy Y. Tsu is Professor in the School of International Studies, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan.