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ID133472
Title ProperFrom Local to national experience
Other Title Informationhas Hiroshima become a 'trauma for everybody'?
LanguageENG
AuthorShipilova, Anna
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Within Japan, the atomic bombing of Hiroshima is understood as a national experience that sets the country apart from nations that have been spared such devastation. A special phrase the Japanese use to describe their country is yuitsu hibaku kokka, 'the only country that has experienced atomic bombing'. This phrase has become a powerful cliché for depicting Japan to a national and international audience. Even though Hiroshima was the experience of a comparatively small group before it spread to a larger collectivity, its transformation into a collective experience is regarded as a natural outcome, explained by the devastating nature of the event. This perspective, however, does not fully explain why people who have different war experiences unconditionally accept as their own experiences ones which they have not personally suffered. This article aims to clarify the process by which the Hiroshima experience was nationalised, and the period of its nationalisation. It also examines whether this transformation means that Hiroshima has become a 'trauma for everybody'. This is achieved through the application of Jeffrey C. Alexander's work on the transformation of Holocaust memories into a collective trauma.
`In' analytical NoteJapanese Studies Vol.34, No.2; Sep.2014: p.193-211
Journal SourceJapanese Studies Vol.34, No.2; Sep.2014: p.193-211
Key WordsCollective Trauma ;  Hiroshima ;  National Experience ;  Atomic Bombing ;  Japan ;  War ;  World War - II ;  Holocaust Memories