Legacies of WWII: The Great Tokyo Air Raid online session (9 March 2022 - 18:00 Tokyo time) - H-Net

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H-Announce

Legacies of WWII: The Great Tokyo Air Raid online session (9
March 2022 - 18:00 Tokyo time)
Announcement published by Robert Dujarric on Tuesday, March 8, 2022
Type:
Lecture
Date:
March 9, 2022
Location:
Japan
Subject Fields:
Military History

The Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple University Japan Presents

Legacies of WWII: The Great Tokyo Air Raid
9 March 2022 (Wed)

6 pm Tokyo (JST) start

Speakers

Aaron William Moore, University of Edinburgh

Sandra Wilson, Murdoch University

Ran Zwigenberg, Pennsylvania State University

Atsuko Shigesawa, Kobe City University

Moderator: Kyle Cleveland, Temple University Japan

Overview

Citation: Robert Dujarric. Legacies of WWII: The Great Tokyo Air Raid online session (9 March 2022 - 18:00 Tokyo time). H-Announce.
05-27-2022.
https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9884080/legacies-wwii-great-tokyo-air-raid-online-session-9-march-2022
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

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On March 9/10, 1945, the United State Army Air Force killed over one hundred thousand people in
what was arguably the biggest attack on an urban environment by any WW II combatant nation (the
atomic bombs included). The B-29 formations used a mixture of high explosives and napalm to
incinerate the working-class districts of the Japanese capital, causing untold suffering among the
civilian population on the ground. The bombers, flying low on Curtis LeMay – the US raids
commander's – orders, were so close to the carnage, when the returning B-29s touched down, they
were fumigated to dissipate the smell of burning flesh. In the aftermath of the attack, Mochizuki
Masako, a 36-year-old housewife in Tokyo’s Honjō Ward, recalled the army piling corpses in trucks,
where she found her sister and niece. Such horrible scenes and suffering notwithstanding, and
despite the earnest effort of countless activists, writers, and others, the air-raid, as well as the larger
fire-bombing campaign, is hardly present in the Japanese collective memory or global histories of the
war, where it is usually overshadowed by the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the Japanese
own atrocities on the mainland.

In our round table panel we ask why, seventy-seven years after the bombing, is there still is relatively
little attention paid to the fire raids in public conversations about World War II? How does it relate to
the Atomic bombings and Japanese war crimes (including the murder of Koreans after the Kanto
Earthquake)? What was its long-term impact, how has it been remembered and memorialized, and in
what ways has it impacted culture in the seven and a half decades since 1945? As current shelling of
civilian areas in Ukraine reminds us, what David Fedman and Cary Karacas called “urbacide,” (the
deliberate destruction of cities), is still present in military thinking in the 21st century, making this
particular anniversary of the air raids as relevant and urgent as ever.

Webinar Access

March 9 | 18:00 (Tokyo) start
Registration Required

https://temple.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwpc-qqqjgpHNW7twktVXdh-HRnMAmA...

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the
meeting.

Information/Questions: Kyle Cleveland: kylecl@temple.edu

Speakers

Citation: Robert Dujarric. Legacies of WWII: The Great Tokyo Air Raid online session (9 March 2022 - 18:00 Tokyo time). H-Announce.
05-27-2022.
https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9884080/legacies-wwii-great-tokyo-air-raid-online-session-9-march-2022
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

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Aaron William Moore

Professor Aaron William Moore is the Handa Chair of Japanese-Chinese Relations at the University of
Edinburgh. He received his PhD from Princeton University in 2006 and held post-doctoral positions at
Harvard and Oxford University. In 2010 he was appointed as a lecturer in the History Department at
the University of Manchester, where he primarily taught modern Chinese history for seven years and
was made Senior Lecturer. He has presented his research as invited lecturer, keynote speaker, and
chair around the world, especially in Britain and continental Europe, North America, and East Asia.
He is the author of many articles on Chinese

and Japanese wartime childhood and youth, as well as two books: Writing War (2013, Harvard),
which analysed over 200 combat soldiers’ diaries from China, Japan, and the United States, and
Bombing the City (2018, Cambridge), which compared the air raid experiences of civilians in British
and Japanese regional cities. In addition to the history of early East Asian science fiction, he is
currently working on a book about the global experiences of wartime youth entitled, What Can Be
Said, a translation volume of works by the critical theorist Hirabayashi Hatsunosuke, and an edited
volume on the early history of the People’s Republic of China, entitled How Maoism Was Made
(Oxford, forthcoming). In 2014 he was awarded the Leverhulme Prize for his work on transnational
and comparative history.

Sandra Wilson

Sandra Wilson is a historian of modern Japan and teaches at Murdoch University, Australia. She has
written about Japanese society and politics in the 1930s and 1940s, the history of Japanese
nationalism, and military violence and war criminals in the Asian theatre of the Second World War.
Among her publications are The Manchurian Crisis and Japanese Society, 1931-33 (Routledge, 2002)
and, with Robert Cribb, Beatrice Trefalt and Dean Aszkielowicz, Japanese War Criminals: the Politics
of Justice After the Second World War (Columbia University Press, 2017; winner of the NSW
Premier’s Prize for History (General History Category), 2017). Her most recent articles are ‘Why
were there no war crimes trials for the Korean War?’, Journal of Global History (2021) and
‘Interpreters as Japanese war criminals’, War in History (2021).

Ran Zwigenberg

Ran Zwigenberg is Associate Professor at Pennsylvania State University. His research focuses on

Citation: Robert Dujarric. Legacies of WWII: The Great Tokyo Air Raid online session (9 March 2022 - 18:00 Tokyo time). H-Announce.
05-27-2022.
https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9884080/legacies-wwii-great-tokyo-air-raid-online-session-9-march-2022
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

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modern Japanese and European history, with a specialization in memory and heritage history. He has
taught and lectured in the United States, Europe, Israel, and Japan, and published on issues of war
memory, heritage, atomic energy, psychiatry, and survivor politics. Zwigenberg’s first book,
Hiroshima: The Origins of Global Memory Culture (Cambridge University Press, 2014), was the
winner of the 2016 Association for Asian Studies’ John W. Hall book award. His second, co-authored
book, Japan’s Castles: Citadels of Modernity in War and Peace, came out with Cambridge University
Press in 2019. He is currently working on a manuscript on the reaction of psychiatry and its allied
professions to the A-bomb.

Atsuko Shigesawa

Atsuko Shigesawa is Associate Professor at Kobe City University of Foreign Studies in Japan. She
earned her Ph.D. in 2019 in the Department of International Studies at Hiroshima City University for
her dissertation entitled "Demystifying the Atomic Bomb: The U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey Goes to
Hiroshima and Nagasaki." She was a Scholar in Residence at American University in Washington D.C.
in 2014-2015, sponsored by the Fulbright Dissertation Program, and is the author of Genbaku to ken-
etsu: Amerikajin kishatachi ga mita Hiroshima, Nagasaki, (2010), which discusses American
censorship during WWII and its influence on the coverage by American journalists of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki following the end of the war.

Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies

Temple University, Japan Campus

www.tuj.ac.jp/icas

Information: Kyle Cleveland, ICAS Co-Director

Email: kylecl@temple.edu

Contact Info:

icas@tuj.temple.edu

Citation: Robert Dujarric. Legacies of WWII: The Great Tokyo Air Raid online session (9 March 2022 - 18:00 Tokyo time). H-Announce.
05-27-2022.
https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9884080/legacies-wwii-great-tokyo-air-raid-online-session-9-march-2022
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

                                                                 4
H-Announce

Contact Email:
icas@tuj.temple.edu

Citation: Robert Dujarric. Legacies of WWII: The Great Tokyo Air Raid online session (9 March 2022 - 18:00 Tokyo time). H-Announce.
05-27-2022.
https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9884080/legacies-wwii-great-tokyo-air-raid-online-session-9-march-2022
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

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