The literary responses to Fukushima disaster appeared in the last few years highlighted the similarities with Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombing experiences as long as both tragedies were caused by an arguable usage of nuclear power. What is remarkable, is that a seismically active area like Japan subjected to earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions ever since has not ever taken a stand on the “literature of the catastrophe” in itself. While the literature about Shoah got a foothold as Holocaust novel, the Japanese genbaku bungaku was instead refused by the Japanese bundan and by hibakusha themselves sounding a critical note for the literary value of the testimonial accounts. Nowadays, the increasing number of post- Fukushima litera...
The devastation of Japan at the end of the Pacific war— through the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and ...
The disasters which struck Japan on 11 March 2011 were threefold - first, a huge earthquake; second,...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the theme of dystopia and tr...
The literary responses to Fukushima disaster appeared in the last few years\ud highlighted the simil...
This study turns the attention to Japanese female journalism in the catastrophic aftermath of 3.11 t...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the study of dystopia and tr...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine three major turning points in Japanese history and the evol...
The tradition of the literary retelling is not anew: classical authors like Omero have been quoted a...
Atomic metaphors permeated daily life as the world reacted to the atomic bombings of Japan and the n...
The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake, tsunami and Fukushima nuclear disaster (collectively referred to as ‘3.1...
The impact of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan on the 11th of March (3.11) exte...
This dissertation takes up the question of how authors, artists, filmmakers and others attempted to ...
January 27, 1945: the Red Army set Auschwitz concentration camp free, making this date the liberatio...
Japan\u27s unique geographical location on the seismically active Ring of Fire has and will contin...
The devastation of Japan at the end of the Pacific war— through the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and ...
The disasters which struck Japan on 11 March 2011 were threefold - first, a huge earthquake; second,...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the theme of dystopia and tr...
The literary responses to Fukushima disaster appeared in the last few years\ud highlighted the simil...
This study turns the attention to Japanese female journalism in the catastrophic aftermath of 3.11 t...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the study of dystopia and tr...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine three major turning points in Japanese history and the evol...
The tradition of the literary retelling is not anew: classical authors like Omero have been quoted a...
Atomic metaphors permeated daily life as the world reacted to the atomic bombings of Japan and the n...
The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake, tsunami and Fukushima nuclear disaster (collectively referred to as ‘3.1...
The impact of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan on the 11th of March (3.11) exte...
This dissertation takes up the question of how authors, artists, filmmakers and others attempted to ...
January 27, 1945: the Red Army set Auschwitz concentration camp free, making this date the liberatio...
Japan\u27s unique geographical location on the seismically active Ring of Fire has and will contin...
The devastation of Japan at the end of the Pacific war— through the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and ...
The disasters which struck Japan on 11 March 2011 were threefold - first, a huge earthquake; second,...
Although the Fukushima literary scenario offers different approaches to the theme of dystopia and tr...