List of Figures List of Maps List of Tables Note to the Reader Preface Acknowledgements Glossary 1. Introduction 2. To Hell and Back: The question of cannibalism in memoirs of the New Guinea campaign 3. Questioning Discipline: Military doctors’ writings and the medical gaze 4. Finding reasons for living and dying in a warzone: cinematic adaptations of Kato Daisuke’s Minami-no-shima ni yuki ga furu 5. Documentaries as co-performative partnership: Framing and presenting testimonies of painful memories 6. From a Soldier to a Best Friend Forever? Manga artist Mizuki Shigeru and the villagers of New Britain Island 7. Vicarious Consumer Travel and the Performance of Emotional Awakening in Travelogues 8. Conclusion: The Road Behind and Ahead Select Bibliography Index
An examination of how wartime experiences and post-war leisure travel impacted the Japanese cultural imagination of Papua New Guinea.
Ryota Nishino is Designated Assistant Professor at the School of Law, Nagoya University, Japan. Previously he was Senior Lecturer in History at the University of the South Pacific, Fiji. His research interests revolve around the circulation of history and historical memory in various media such as school textbooks and travelogues.
Nishino investigates memoirs and narratives of Japanese wartime
experience in New Guinea. Nearly all 150,000 servicemen deployed
there died of illness or starvation. Japanese culture, subsequent
events, and the passage of time have shaped memory, and Nishino
astutely follows a chain of alternative portrayals of the Japanese
as heroes, victims, or perpetrators in war memoir, film, manga, and
travelogue from the 1940s to the present. English readers will
appreciate new insight into Asia-Pacific war memory from the
Japanese perspective.
*Lamont Lindstrom, Kendall Professor and Chair of Anthropology,
University of Tulsa, USA*
A fascinating account of how Papua New Guinea has featured in
Japanese popular culture representations of the Asia-Pacific War.
Through this microcosm the brutality of the war and the painful
processes of memory-making it spawned are brought into admirably
clear focus. The discussion of postwar travel to PNG is a
particularly important and innovative contribution to our
understanding of Japanese war memories
*Philip Seaton, Professor, Tokyo University of Japan Studies,
Japan*
Broad engagement with both Japanese- and English-language secondary
scholarship is a strength of this book…Nishino teases out fresh
insights through careful, close reading. Scholars of cultural
studies, war, travel, and modern Japan will all find much to
interest them in this book. The numerous translations of passages
from source material will help make this work useful in the
classroom.
*H-Net Reviews*
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