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1 - In the shadow of Hiroshima: the United States and Asia in the aftermath of Japanese defeat

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 May 2010

Matthew Jones
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham
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Summary

After the rain came a wind – the great ‘fire wind’ – which blew back in towards the centre of the catastrophe, increasing in force as the air over Hiroshima grew hotter and hotter because of the great fires. The wind blew so hard that it uprooted huge trees in the parks where survivors were collecting. Thousands of people were simply fleeing, blindly and without an objective except to get out of the city. Some in the suburbs, seeing them come, thought at first they were Negroes, not Japanese, so blackened were their skins. The refugees could not explain what had burned them. ‘We saw the flash,’ they said, ‘and this is what happened.’

In many respects, the use of the atomic bomb against Japan seemed a fitting climax to the Far Eastern War of 1941–5, a conflict where many Americans exhibited a level of hatred for their Asian adversary that some historians have argued gave the fighting in the Pacific a different quality to that found in the European theatres of war. Racial animosity, fuelled by a desire for revenge, it is maintained, became one of the defining characteristics of the struggle with Japan. Having reared its head several times already since early in the century, anti-Japanese racism in the United States poured forth during the years after Pearl Harbor, with the enemy frequently caricatured in subhuman terms, in some cases fit for little more than extermination.

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After Hiroshima
The United States, Race and Nuclear Weapons in Asia, 1945–1965
, pp. 7 - 56
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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