Abstract

Historical facts are sealed, but the memory of a particular history changes from one generation to the next. The highly politicized nature of historical memory determined that only one interpretation can be right at a time. Yet when individual memories contradict what is taught publicly, such gap creates an identity conflict within generations of war survivors. Such is the conventionality of Okinawa’s unique history. Focusing on the relationship between “memory” and “identity,” Countering this conception is the suppressed memories of individuals whose recollection challenged the conventional portrayal of victimhood. Drawing on the second-generation war survivor Medoruma Shun’s fictional novella Droplets as primary document, this paper explores the conflict of identities of Okinawans from a perspective of “memory.” Emphasizing the consequence of prolonged war trauma created by the lapses in public and private memories, the paper points to the bridge of the two as a potential gateway to resolve not only identity conflicts within individual war survivors, but collective healing as a group in reconciliation with its own pastcrimes.

Highlights

  • “The one responsible for the mass suicide on Kerama, too, the military share a common purpose and destiny.4 Others must have ceaselessly repeated that kind of attempt at self killed themselves in fear of the brutality of the American deception and fraud toward others

  • 94 –Kenzaburo Oe, Okinawa Notes forced mass suicides of civilians by imperial Japanese soldiers became the key issue in the writing of history of the Thirty-five years after the publication of his book, Okinawa Notes (Okinawa Noto), the famous Japanese writer and Nobel laureate, Kenzaburo, Oe found himself embroiled

  • Many Okinawans came to see the act of forced suicides as evidence of Japanese discrimination against Okinawan lives

Read more

Summary

Introduction

“The one responsible for the mass suicide on Kerama, too, the military share a common purpose and destiny.4 Others must have ceaselessly repeated that kind of attempt at self killed themselves in fear of the brutality of the American deception and fraud toward others.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call