You are not authenticated through an institution. Should you have institutional access?
Here's how to get it
Chapter
Open Access
8. Japanese War Crimes and War Crimes Trials in China
-
Ikō Toshiya
Ikō ToshiyaSearch for this author in:
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- 1. Genocide and Mass Violence in Asia: An Introduction 1
-
Section I: Forms of Mass Violence and Genocide
- 2. Crowd Violence in East Pakistan/ Bangladesh 1971–1972 15
- 3. “Kill 3 Million and the Rest Will Eat of Our Hands”: Genocide, Rape, and the Bangladeshi War of Liberation 40
-
Section II: Victims
- 4. Reframing the “Comfort Women” Issue: New Representations of an Old War Crime 61
- 5. From Student Activists to Muktibahini: Students, Mass Violence and the Bangladesh Liberation War 78
-
Section III: Perpetrators
- 6. Narratives Without Guilt: The Self- Perception of Japanese Perpetrators 101
- 7. Excessive Violence in a War Without Fronts: Explaining Atrocities in South Vietnam (1965–1973) 117
-
Section IV: Memory and Justice
- 8. Japanese War Crimes and War Crimes Trials in China 141
- 9. Forgotten Genocide in Indonesia: Mass Violence, Resource Exploitation and Struggle for Independence in West Papua 160
- 10. Murder, Museums, and Memory: Cold War Public History in Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, and Phnom Penh 189
- Contributors 219
Readers are also interested in:
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- 1. Genocide and Mass Violence in Asia: An Introduction 1
-
Section I: Forms of Mass Violence and Genocide
- 2. Crowd Violence in East Pakistan/ Bangladesh 1971–1972 15
- 3. “Kill 3 Million and the Rest Will Eat of Our Hands”: Genocide, Rape, and the Bangladeshi War of Liberation 40
-
Section II: Victims
- 4. Reframing the “Comfort Women” Issue: New Representations of an Old War Crime 61
- 5. From Student Activists to Muktibahini: Students, Mass Violence and the Bangladesh Liberation War 78
-
Section III: Perpetrators
- 6. Narratives Without Guilt: The Self- Perception of Japanese Perpetrators 101
- 7. Excessive Violence in a War Without Fronts: Explaining Atrocities in South Vietnam (1965–1973) 117
-
Section IV: Memory and Justice
- 8. Japanese War Crimes and War Crimes Trials in China 141
- 9. Forgotten Genocide in Indonesia: Mass Violence, Resource Exploitation and Struggle for Independence in West Papua 160
- 10. Murder, Museums, and Memory: Cold War Public History in Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, and Phnom Penh 189
- Contributors 219