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ID150572
Title ProperHistorical interrogations of Japanese children amid disaster and war, 1920–1945
LanguageENG
AuthorMoore, Aaron William ;  Cave, Peter
Summary / Abstract (Note)Historical research on modern Japan has often given insufficient attention to the lives and experiences of children and young people. However, this situation is beginning to change, as historians start to exploit the rich documentary resources, including children’s diaries and letters, that have been collected by institutions across Japan. Japanese children’s responses to disaster and war are especially well documented, and the articles in this special issue begin to explore the potential of these resources. They illuminate different ideals of childhood in Japan during the years between 1920 and 1945, and show how tensions and conflicts between these ideals played out under the stresses of natural disaster and man-made catastrophe. In analysing documents written by children, one crucial methodological and theoretical question is how to assess the degree of agency that such documents show. Adult influences on children’s writing cannot be ignored, and in modern Japan, the education system was arguably the most important channel for such influences. However, we should remember that children also influence one another, and also that the writing of children is, as is of course the case with adults, powerfully shaped by contemporary cultural and social contexts.
`In' analytical NoteJapanese Studies Vol. 36, No.3; Dec 2016: p. 287-298
Journal SourceJapanese Studies 2016-12 36, 3
Key Words1920–1945 ;  Historical Interrogations ;  Japanese Children ;  Disaster and War