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E-raamat: Tourism and Difficult Histories in Japan

, (University of Central Lancashire, UK)
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This book explores the relationship between tourism and difficult histories in Japan. More specifically, it considers the manner in which places associated with past dark events are presented and interpreted for tourists. In so doing, it seeks to identify the extent to which tourism contributes to enhancing mutual understanding.



This book explores the relationship between tourism and difficult histories in Japan. More specifically, it considers the manner in which places associated with past dark events are presented and interpreted for tourists. In so doing, it seeks to identify the extent to which tourism contributes to enhancing mutual understanding as a stated objective of Japanese tourism policy.

The book presents a range of tourist destinations which offer the opportunity to consider dark events in Japanese history in the context of broader contemporary debates surrounding how such events should be remembered and the contribution of these tourist destinations to peace and reconciliation. Case studies include both well- and lesser-known destinations related to the Pacific War, from a comparison of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki Peace/Atomic Bomb Museums to an island where poison gas was manufactured and a former copper mine in which prisoners of war worked during 1944–1945. Other case studies focus on disaster sites, contentious industrial heritage, controversial Hansen’s disease (leprosy) sanatoria and more.

This significant volume contributes to an understanding of the relationship between tourism and difficult histories in Japan. This will appeal widely across disciplines, including Tourism, Asian Studies, Geography, War and Reconciliation Studies, Peace Studies and International Relations.

1. Introduction: Tourism and difficult histories in Japan a pathway to
reconciliation?
2. From poison gas to rabbits: kunoshima
3. Discovering the
hidden Christians
4. Gunkanjima: Hiding a dark history?
5. Commemorating
suicide pilots: Kamikaze and kaiten tourism
6. Okinawa: A continuing
difficult history?
7. Atomic bomb tourism: Hiroshima and Nagasaki
8. Japans
leprosy sanatoriums: Reconciling a difficult past
9. Fukushima:
Reconstruction and hope
10. PoWs of Kishu Copper Mine: From commemoration to
reconciliation?
11. Final thoughts
Richard Sharpley is Emeritus Professor of Tourism at the University of Lancashire, UK, and Visiting Professor at Wakayama University, Japan.

Kumi Kato is Professor in the Faculty of Tourism at Wakayama University and at the Creating Happiness Incubation institute, Musashino University, Japan.