Navigating Public History: In Contestation with Japan’s Historical Revisionism
Data
2025Autore
Yoshida, Yutaka <School of Social Sciences,
Glamorgan Building, Cardiff University, King Edward VII Avenue, CF10 3NN,
Cardiff, UK>
Tozawa, Emi <School of Arts, Languages and Cultures, The University of
Manchester, Oxford Road, M13 9PL, Manchester, UK>
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Mostra tutti i dati dell'itemAbstract
In this article, we examine the phenomenon of
‘historical revisionism’ (HR), a movement to construct a
‘bright’ historical narrative of Japan often by denying and
minimizing its wrongdoings under Imperial rule, and
discuss possible interventions with such narratives through
public history. We trace the development of HR, its proponents’ identity as ‘truth-seekers’ and their sentiments,
such as victimhood and anti-elitism. We argue that an
effective intervention would also require widely building
social trust in those professional historians opposing HR
by presenting their complex procedure of critical historical
research and knowledge so as to ‘immunize’ potential consumers of HR from historical distortions. In times of political
contestation over history due to the democratic nature of
interpreting history, we suggest shifting away from the
common Japanese debate over whether to share academic
historians’ ‘authority’ or risk relativism that enables HR, and
moving towards a collaborative approach where diverse
participants including academic historians share the
commitment to interpretive rigor, thereby countering HR.
