ID | 103319 |
Title Proper | Problem of changing language communities |
Other Title Information | veterans and memory writing in China, Taiwan, and Japan |
Language | ENG |
Author | Moore, Aaron William |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This paper examines the role that veterans played in the construction of historical memory narratives in mainland China, Taiwan, and Japan. I argue that veterans, who had long established a 'language community' with a particular way to speak about the war, found it difficult to communicate with post-war audiences that did not share that experience. The paper analyses six categories of 'memory writing' that veterans used to engage with memory debates: post-war diaries, 'testimonial literature', articles and literary works, surveys and oral histories, memoirs, and paratext. This study thus proposes that veterans do not avoid discussion of war, but can only be 'heard' by members of their language community, or by a post-war society that is prepared to 'listen' to their message with little mediation. This is a direct consequence of their experience of the war, and how they crafted their language community at that time. |
`In' analytical Note | Modern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 2; Mar 2011: p399-429 |
Journal Source | Modern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 2; Mar 2011: p399-429 |
Key Words | Language ; China ; Taiwan ; Japan |