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Hiroshima After Iraq: Three Studies in Art and War

Cambridge University Press (2010)

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  1. Hiroshima temporalities.Michael J. Shapiro - 2015 - Thesis Eleven 129 (1):40-56.
    As is made evident in Rosalyn Deutsche’s recent book, Hiroshima After Iraq, Hiroshima keeps returning through the way diverse artistic genres evoke parallels between the bombing of Hiroshima and subsequent atrocities. After contrasting US and Japanese perspectives on the event of the bombing and drawing on Walter Benjamin’s concept of temporal plasticity, this essay ponders the future anterior of Hiroshima, its continuous will-have-beens, as new films and re-analyses of older ones continue to restage its significance.
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  • Hiroshima: Remembering and forgetting, everything and nothing.Keith Tester - 2015 - Thesis Eleven 129 (1):27-39.
    Is it possible to remember Hiroshima and, if it is, what exactly is being remembered? This paper uses Resnais’s film Hiroshima Mon Amour as a way of asking this question. The problem of remembering is identified as being due to how nuclear explosions are beyond the human capacity to understand. The paper draws on the work of Günther Anders to explore the implications of Hiroshima for the human understanding of human possibilities.
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