Relics of Empire Underground: The Making of Dark Heritage in Contemporary Japan
- Authors
- Han, Jung-Sun
- Issue Date
- 2-Apr-2016
- Publisher
- ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
- Keywords
- Japan; dark heritage; war-related sites; ethnicity; memory; civil activities; Okinawa; Okayama; Matsushiro
- Citation
- ASIAN STUDIES REVIEW, v.40, no.2, pp 287 - 302
- Pages
- 16
- Indexed
- SSCI
AHCI
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- ASIAN STUDIES REVIEW
- Volume
- 40
- Number
- 2
- Start Page
- 287
- End Page
- 302
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/88944
- DOI
- 10.1080/10357823.2016.1140719
- ISSN
- 1035-7823
1467-8403
- Abstract
- This paper examines civil activities to protect and conserve the underground war-related sites in contemporary Japan. Conservation movements rooted in local communities and centred on the Japanese Network to Protect War-Related Sites are making efforts to transform the dark heritage of war-related sites into cultural property in an attempt to integrate diverse wartime experiences. In delving into the heritage-making practices, I introduce local movements in Okinawa and Okayama. Okinawa hosts the first underground war-related site to become a cultural property, the Haebaru Army Hospital Bunkers, while Okayama struggles to create another one by making the Kamejima Mountain Underground Plant a dark heritage site. I argue that these conservation movements are challenging the homogenising national war memory by attaching ethnically diversified vernacular memories to the underground sites. In doing so, these underground war-related sites have become public spaces where new forms of social engagement are negotiated and contested.
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Collections - Division of International Studies > Division of International Studies > 1. Journal Articles

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