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        2. The First Revisionists: Bonner Fellers, Herbert Hoover, and Japan’s Decision to Surrender
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        Haruo Iguchi
        
                                    
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                                            Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
- 
                            I Memory’s Many Forms
- 1. Remembering Pearl Harbor before September 11, 2001 15
- 
                            II Policymakers and the Uses of Historical Memory
- 2. The First Revisionists: Bonner Fellers, Herbert Hoover, and Japan’s Decision to Surrender 51
- 3. History and Memory in Postwar U.S.-Japanese Relations 85
- 4. Cold War Diplomacy and Memories of the Pacific War: A Comparison of the American and Japanese Cases 121
- 
                            III Making Memory Concrete: Museums, Monuments, and Memorials
- 5. Constructing a National Memory of War: War Museums in China, Japan, and the United States 155
- 6. The Enola Gay and Contested Public Memory 201
- 7. War Memories across the Pacific: Japanese Visitors at the Arizona Memorial 234
- 
                            IV Transpacific Memories
- 8. Memory and the Lost Found Relationship between Black Americans and Japan 9. 255
- 9. Entangled Memories: China in American and Japanese Remembrances of World War II 287
- Concluding Remarks 319
- Contributors 329
- Index 331
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
- 
                            I Memory’s Many Forms
- 1. Remembering Pearl Harbor before September 11, 2001 15
- 
                            II Policymakers and the Uses of Historical Memory
- 2. The First Revisionists: Bonner Fellers, Herbert Hoover, and Japan’s Decision to Surrender 51
- 3. History and Memory in Postwar U.S.-Japanese Relations 85
- 4. Cold War Diplomacy and Memories of the Pacific War: A Comparison of the American and Japanese Cases 121
- 
                            III Making Memory Concrete: Museums, Monuments, and Memorials
- 5. Constructing a National Memory of War: War Museums in China, Japan, and the United States 155
- 6. The Enola Gay and Contested Public Memory 201
- 7. War Memories across the Pacific: Japanese Visitors at the Arizona Memorial 234
- 
                            IV Transpacific Memories
- 8. Memory and the Lost Found Relationship between Black Americans and Japan 9. 255
- 9. Entangled Memories: China in American and Japanese Remembrances of World War II 287
- Concluding Remarks 319
- Contributors 329
- Index 331