This paper is a biographical case study that explores the distinct experiences of three Australian-born Japanese (hereafter, Nikkei-Australians) who volunteered for Australian military service during World War II: Mario Takasuka, Joseph Suzuki and Winston Ide. It examines the social and political context in which these soldiers lived, concluding that they faced a disconnect between the way they were viewed by the government, their local communities and themselves. Notions of identity and nationalism are also explored in the context of World War II and the White Australia Policy, and are compared with the experiences of non-European soldiers in Australia and Nikkei soldiers abroad. The paper also highlights the ambiguous position of Nikkei-A...
After World War II, Australia joined the Allied nations in responding to the allegations of shocking...
In January 1955, an official mission departed Japan for New Guinea to collectremains of the war dead...
This paper is a case study of the means by which the Australian government sought to maintain the mi...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...
This thesis explores the British Commonwealth experience of occupation in Japan from 1945-1952. It d...
The Maori Battalion's wartime experience forms an important part of the New Zealand and Pacific Isla...
With a population of approximately seven million at the outbreak of the Second World War, the half-a...
This is a rare account of early post-war Japan from the cutting edge of day-to-day work in the Allie...
Little is known about the experiences of Japanese war brides who met their New Zealand husbands-to-b...
The entry of Italy into the second world war brought considerable disruption to the over thirty thou...
Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rathe...
Previous scholarship on trials of war criminals focused on the legal proceedings with only tacit ack...
Between 1957 and 1968, the Prime Minister Robert Menzies and several of his ministers, including Ale...
This article surveys Australian citizenship: its distinctive characteristics in the first half of th...
The Japanese soldiers who remained in Indonesia after WWII were stigmatized in post-war Japan as fug...
After World War II, Australia joined the Allied nations in responding to the allegations of shocking...
In January 1955, an official mission departed Japan for New Guinea to collectremains of the war dead...
This paper is a case study of the means by which the Australian government sought to maintain the mi...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...
This thesis explores the British Commonwealth experience of occupation in Japan from 1945-1952. It d...
The Maori Battalion's wartime experience forms an important part of the New Zealand and Pacific Isla...
With a population of approximately seven million at the outbreak of the Second World War, the half-a...
This is a rare account of early post-war Japan from the cutting edge of day-to-day work in the Allie...
Little is known about the experiences of Japanese war brides who met their New Zealand husbands-to-b...
The entry of Italy into the second world war brought considerable disruption to the over thirty thou...
Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rathe...
Previous scholarship on trials of war criminals focused on the legal proceedings with only tacit ack...
Between 1957 and 1968, the Prime Minister Robert Menzies and several of his ministers, including Ale...
This article surveys Australian citizenship: its distinctive characteristics in the first half of th...
The Japanese soldiers who remained in Indonesia after WWII were stigmatized in post-war Japan as fug...
After World War II, Australia joined the Allied nations in responding to the allegations of shocking...
In January 1955, an official mission departed Japan for New Guinea to collectremains of the war dead...
This paper is a case study of the means by which the Australian government sought to maintain the mi...