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Article
War and Nationalism in Yamato: Trauma and Forgetting the Postwar
The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus (2011)
  • Aaron Gerow
Abstract
A shorter version of a long piece that I wrote for the forthcoming Distorted Lens anthology, edited by Chiho Sawada and Michael Berry. The longer version looks at a number of recent films made about kamikaze missions during WWII and compares them to earlier examples from the 1950s to the 1970s. Most discussions of Japanese war films have considered them in terms of how they warp, gloss over, or forget the problems or traumas of the war, but I analyze them in terms of how they work to forget the problematic history of postwar Japan. My main text is Sato Jun'ya's Yamato (Otokotachi no Yamato, 2005). In particular I argue that the film's use of what I call vicarious trauma in depicting the demise of the young recruits on the Battleship Yamato functions to erase postwar trauma, an operation that I consider to be the other side of the same coin to the nostalgic depictions of 1950s and 1960s Japan in films such as Yamazaki Takashi's Always--Sunset on Third Street (Always--Sanchome no yuhi).
Keywords
  • Japanese cinema,
  • war film,
  • World War II,
  • Battleship Yamato,
  • postwar history,
  • trauma
Publication Date
June, 2011
Citation Information
Aaron Gerow. "War and Nationalism in Yamato: Trauma and Forgetting the Postwar" The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus Vol. 9 Iss. 24 (2011)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/aarongerow/44/