Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Envisioning Nagasaki
View through CrossRef
This chapter opens with the discussion of the title of Nagasaki's reconstruction law. It narrates the concerns of Nagasaki and Hiroshima representatives who met in Tokyo to submit a proposal to reconstruct as a “peace commemoration city” and to seek a reconstruction law that recognized the “special nature” of their city's destruction. The chapter also outlines how the competition between Nagasaki and Hiroshima grew out of the postwar need for national reconstruction funds. The path of reconstruction, in both cities, was not predetermined but rather grew out of the many visions for reconstruction that emerged during the first several years after the bombing. The chapter then argues that the American occupiers and Christians envisioned the revival of Nagasaki in similar ways to municipal officials, creating what the author calls the municipal vision of reconstruction. Finally, the chapter seeks to link the city's international past to its atomic present instead of defining Nagasaki's place in history solely in terms of the bombing.
Title: Envisioning Nagasaki
Description:
This chapter opens with the discussion of the title of Nagasaki's reconstruction law.
It narrates the concerns of Nagasaki and Hiroshima representatives who met in Tokyo to submit a proposal to reconstruct as a “peace commemoration city” and to seek a reconstruction law that recognized the “special nature” of their city's destruction.
The chapter also outlines how the competition between Nagasaki and Hiroshima grew out of the postwar need for national reconstruction funds.
The path of reconstruction, in both cities, was not predetermined but rather grew out of the many visions for reconstruction that emerged during the first several years after the bombing.
The chapter then argues that the American occupiers and Christians envisioned the revival of Nagasaki in similar ways to municipal officials, creating what the author calls the municipal vision of reconstruction.
Finally, the chapter seeks to link the city's international past to its atomic present instead of defining Nagasaki's place in history solely in terms of the bombing.
Related Results
“Nagasaki” in Akutagawa Ryūnosuke’s Taishō-Era Literary Imagination
“Nagasaki” in Akutagawa Ryūnosuke’s Taishō-Era Literary Imagination
Anri Yasuda discusses how Nagasaki’s history as an international city, and especially the region’s Christian presence, shaped its image in popular cultural discourse as a city that...
Evaluation of a Telemedicine System for Supporting Thyroid Disease Diagnosis
Evaluation of a Telemedicine System for Supporting Thyroid Disease Diagnosis
A telemedicine system connecting Japan and Belarus via a communication satellite and the international ISDN has been in use since February, 1999. Two relational databases, which ar...
Masks of Whatchamacallit: A Nagasaki Tale
Masks of Whatchamacallit: A Nagasaki Tale
Hayashi Kyoko, born in Nagasaki in 1930, spent much of her childhood in wartime Shanghai. Returning to Nagasaki in March 1945, she attended Nagasaki Girls High School and was a stu...
On Rereleasing The Bells of Nagasaki to the World
On Rereleasing The Bells of Nagasaki to the World
Tokusaburō Nagai, the grandson of Nagai Takashi, reflects on the legacy and status of his grandfather’s literature and memory. He discusses the significance of publishing a new Eng...
Introduction
Introduction
Chad R. Diehl has written the volume’s introduction as an essay that outlines the most salient points emerging from discussions and representations of the atomic experience of Naga...
Urakami Memory and the Two Popes: The Disrupting of an Abstracted Nuclear Discourse
Urakami Memory and the Two Popes: The Disrupting of an Abstracted Nuclear Discourse
Since 1945, official Catholic discourse around nuclear weapons has condemned their existence on the one hand and supported them as deterrents on the other. This paper argues the la...
The City of Nagasaki Peace Declaration
The City of Nagasaki Peace Declaration
How many people in the world now remember that fateful day? At 11:02 a.m. on August 9, fifty-nine years ago, the city of Nagasaki was instantly transformed into ruins by a single a...
Future population of Atomic Bomb Survivors in Nagasaki
Future population of Atomic Bomb Survivors in Nagasaki
The Nagasaki University Atomic Bomb Survivor Database, which was established in 1978 for elucidating the long-term health effects of the atomic bombing, has registered since 1970 a...

