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JAPAN - EDUCATION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   092216


After the battle for Saipan: the tnternment of Japanese civilians at camp susupe, 1944-1946 / Trefalt, Beatrice   Journal Article
Trefalt, Beatrice Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Although the islands of the Northern Marianas are famous for the ferocity of the battles of June and July 1944 and their subsequent role as crucial military airbases for the defeat of Japan, they are less well known as the site of the first US occupation of a Japanese territory. During the battles and in their wake, the civilian population of Saipan was herded into internment camps, where they were kept until early 1946. This article considers Japanese civilian experiences of life in Saipan under Occupation, the tensions between the administration of the camp and the internees, and the way in which the experience reflected and reshaped the understanding of the enemy, both in Japanese and in American eyes.
Key Words Internment  Saipan  Japan - Civilians  Japan - Education 
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ID:   092221


Risk and home: after dark by Murakami Haruki / Otomo, Rio   Journal Article
Otomo, Rio Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This essay proposes a critical reading of After Dark by Murakami Haruki, published in 2004. I primarily focus on the ways in which this text attributes safety and danger, home and risk, or the quotidian and the extraordinary. I argue that the narrative style that Murakami employs here evokes in readers a longing for being safe at home and a sense of being content with the way things are. It presents the nature of space as heterogeneous, hence with a potential danger constantly lurking over it. Women are placed at the heart of such a heterotopic enclosure, projecting the clich d desire of the male gaze, which is represented by the voice of the narrator. Jean-Luc Godard's 1965 film Alphaville is one of the key references Murakami makes in this text. In this film misogyny and self-reference are strategically employed to perform a critique of history. Reading After Dark in the light of Alphaville, I question the value of Murakami's narrative strategy.
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