pearl harbor
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2022 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-103
Author(s):  
J. Charles Schencking

Between 1941 and 1945, Americans expressed outrage over Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor and subsequent military aggression. Numerous commentators, citizens, and opinion-makers looked beyond wartime atrocities and regularly vilified Japanese for the crime of “ingratitude.” Japan, they argued, had not merely attacked the country that had opened it to the outside world a century earlier, but had also declared war on the people who had saved its citizens in 1923. This article explores why, amidst the great whirlwind of wartime inhumanity, Americans harkened back to their 1923 humanitarian engagement with Japan following the Great Kantō Earthquake. Many did so, I suggest, to assist wartime mobilization, to lionize America’s righteous global stature, and to forge and reinforce constructions of their enemy’s sub-human character. Only humans, many angry Americans argued, understood or could express feelings of gratitude. Highlighting Japan’s supposed “ingratitude,” and their “betrayal” of America’s humanitarian generosity served as an emotive way to dehumanize all Japanese beyond the well-documented discussions of wartime aggression, treachery, or “innate racial characteristics.” Elites employed these constructions drawn from their enemy’s supposed ingratitude to help legitimate a brutal war waged without mercy against soldiers and civilians alike.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 99-113
Author(s):  
Paweł A. Leszczyński
Keyword(s):  

W niniejszym artykule przedstawiono zagadnienie internowania przedstawicieli japońskiej grupy etnicznej zamieszkałej na zachodnim wybrzeżu Stanów Zjednoczonych Ameryki po ataku Japonii na Pearl Harbor. Omówiono istotę tego kontrowersyjnego posunięcia, niektóre aspekty konstytucyjne reagowania organów państwowych USA w stanach nadzwyczajnych, sądową kontrolę internowania obywateli amerykańskich pochodzenia japońskiego na przykładzie sprawy Korematsu, a także zmagania japońskiej grupy etnicznej w USA o ustawowe uznanie ich krzywd z tytułu internowania w okresie II wojny światowej.


2021 ◽  
pp. 189-196
Author(s):  
Sadao Yamane ◽  
Abé Mark Nornes ◽  
Hajime Komatsuzawa
Keyword(s):  

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