Introduction: An Unfinished Atomic Bomb, David Lowe, Cassandra
Atherton, and Alyson Miller
Chapter 1: Defending the Indefensible: The Tragic Life of Hiroshima
Pilot Paul Tibbets, Jr., Peter J. Kuznick
Chapter 2: Article 9 as Memorial, Carolyn Stevens
Chapter 3: Atomic Bomb Literature for Children: Tatsuharu Kodama’s
The Lunch Box and Shin’s Tricycle, Alyson Miller
Chapter 4: Fading Lights: Digital Visualization and the Legacy of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Mick Broderick
Chapter 5: Two-Way Mirror: The Significance of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki for the U.S.–North Korea Nuclear Crisis, Adam
Broinowski
Chapter 6: Hibaku Jumoku, Nature, and Hiroshima’s Recovery after
the A-Bomb, Glenn Moore
Chapter 7: “In the Shadow of the Cloud”: Hibakusha Poets as Public
Intellectuals, Cassandra Atherton
Chapter 8: The Flowers of Hiroshima, Monica Braw
Chapter 9: The Manhattan Project Historical National Park, David
Lowe
Chapter 10: Hi-Roshimon: What We See When We Look at Hiroshima,
Robert Jacobs
David Lowe is chair in contemporary history at Deakin
University.
Cassandra Atherton received a PhD in literary studies from the
University of Melbourne.
Alyson Miller is lecturer in writing and literature at Deakin
University.
The atomic bombings, because of the sheer scale of their
destruction and the long-term effects on the human mind and body,
compelled the survivors to live as hibakusha throughout their
entire lives. The essays compiled in this book eloquently describe
their struggle to come to terms with their mangled lives and
analyze how the wider world tried to remember, and sometimes
forget, the human cost of the bombing. This is a compassionate,
timely, and extremely readable book that reminds readers that it is
our responsibility to pass on the memories of the atomic bombing so
that there shall be ‘no more Hiroshima and Nagasaki.’
*Fumiko Nishizaki, University of Tokyo*
The cultural, political, and ethical aftershocks of the atomic
bombing of Hiroshima in August 1945 are still being felt, perhaps
more insistently now than they have for years. As this collection
of essays that probe the transnational fault lines of nuclear
destruction make clear, the atomic bomb is very much
'unfinished'—both a haunting reminder of historical destruction and
a disturbing specter of potential catastrophe to come. The
Unfinished Atomic Bomb is important reading, not merely for those
wanting to keep abreast of recent developments in ‘bomb
scholarship,’ but also for those interested in one of the most
compelling issues of our time.
*Robin Gerster, Monash University*
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