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Michigan Monograph Series in Japanese Studies #17

Righteous Cause or Tragic Folly: Changing Views of War in Modern Japanese Poetry (Volume 17)

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The subject of modern Japanese poetry written in support of the nation’s wars, long considered a taboo in postwar literary circles, is explored here in historical and cultural context. Steve Rabson presents translations and explications of works by poets who wrote both for and against war, providing background essential for understanding why some of Japan’s most famous writers swung 180 degrees to support or oppose war at different times in their careers. Through examples from American and British poetry, Rabson also shows that this phenomenon of poets changing their views is by no means exclusive to Japan. Exposing the efforts of some Japanese writers after 1945 to conceal or revise their poetry written during World War II, the author discusses assertions by literary critics and historians that poets bear a special “war responsibility.”

300 pages, Hardcover

First published February 1, 1998

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About the author

Steve Rabson

10 books2 followers
Steve Rabson is an American Japanologist, historian, translator, academic, and professor emeritus of East Asian Studies at Brown University. Rabson's research has focused on modern Japanese literature, especially works depicting war, its aftermath, and the experiences of women and minorities. He is regarded as an expert on Okinawa, subject of several of his books, and has spoken of wartime rape there to the New York Times. He is also a Japan Focus associate. As a U.S. Army draftee he was stationed in Okinawa in 1967-68.

(from Wikipedia)

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