This paper explores the cultural dimensions of the interactions between the Japanese occupied and Australian occupiers in the Hiroshima prefecture between 1946 and 1952
The impact of collective memory on mobilisation processes is an emerging research field in social mo...
Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rathe...
Introduction For contemporary visitors to Hiroshima and Nagasaki the legacy of the Bomb is mostly ab...
This paper explores the ‘different, but still possibly significant, status’ of the memories of Austr...
In some respects the Allied occupation of Japan from 1945 to 1952 would appear to be a relatively st...
Dr Gordon Daniels, Reader in History at the University of Sheffield, presented his paper on the Soci...
Recent studies of memory work in China have explored productively the uses of national narratives of...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.Traumatic experience, such as ...
Although silence is certainly not what comes to mind first when considering the vast archive of crit...
This paper considers a number of problems which arose after the publication of my earlier work entit...
This thesis explores the British Commonwealth experience of occupation in Japan from 1945-1952. It d...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...
This paper examines how British war veterans fold together war time and post war experiences in prac...
Nanzan UniversityThis study examines the way in which Tokyo has exploited the atomic bombing of Hiro...
In 1945, Japan was bombed into submission by the dropping of two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Naga...
The impact of collective memory on mobilisation processes is an emerging research field in social mo...
Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rathe...
Introduction For contemporary visitors to Hiroshima and Nagasaki the legacy of the Bomb is mostly ab...
This paper explores the ‘different, but still possibly significant, status’ of the memories of Austr...
In some respects the Allied occupation of Japan from 1945 to 1952 would appear to be a relatively st...
Dr Gordon Daniels, Reader in History at the University of Sheffield, presented his paper on the Soci...
Recent studies of memory work in China have explored productively the uses of national narratives of...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.Traumatic experience, such as ...
Although silence is certainly not what comes to mind first when considering the vast archive of crit...
This paper considers a number of problems which arose after the publication of my earlier work entit...
This thesis explores the British Commonwealth experience of occupation in Japan from 1945-1952. It d...
The Pacific War ended the presence of Japanese settlers in Papua and New Guinea. It was a tragedy, a...
This paper examines how British war veterans fold together war time and post war experiences in prac...
Nanzan UniversityThis study examines the way in which Tokyo has exploited the atomic bombing of Hiro...
In 1945, Japan was bombed into submission by the dropping of two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Naga...
The impact of collective memory on mobilisation processes is an emerging research field in social mo...
Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rathe...
Introduction For contemporary visitors to Hiroshima and Nagasaki the legacy of the Bomb is mostly ab...