I. FEATURED HIBAKUSHA SOURCES
Interviews
Do-oh Mineko, 1 interview, 2003
Nagano Etsuko, 6 interviews, 2007–2011
Okada Ikuyo (Do-oh Mineko’s sister), 4 interviews, 2007–2011
Taniguchi Sumiteru, 6 interviews, 1986–2011
Wada Hisako (Wada Koichi’s wife), 2 interviews, 2007–2009
Wada Koichi, 6 interviews, 2003–2011
Yoshida Katsuji, 3 interviews, 2007–2009
Yoshida Kenji (Yoshida Katsuji’s brother), 2 interviews, 2010–2011
Yoshida Naoji (Yoshida Katsuji’s son), 2 interviews, 2010–2011
Yoshida Tomoji (Yoshida Katsuji’s son), 2 interviews, 2010–2011
Other Sources (Selected)
DO-OH MINEKO
Do-oh, Mineko. “Hibaku taiken kowa” [Lecture on Atomic Bomb Experience],’98 Shugaku ryoko, Asahikawa fuji joshi koto gakko [School Field Trip, Asahikawa Fuji Girls’ High School]. Privately printed, October 18, 1998. Copy provided by Do-oh Mineko.
———. Interview. The Children of Nagasaki. DVD. Produced by Nippon Eiga Shinsha, Ltd. City of Nagasaki, March 2005.
Ito, Sei. “Nagasaki noto [Nagasaki Notes]: Do-oh Mineko-san, 1930–2007.” Pts. 1–10, Asahi Shimbun, April 24, 2009–May 3, 2009.
Keisho bukai (Do-oh Mineko iko shuu) henshu iinkai [Legacy Group (Do-oh Mineko Posthumous Collection) Editorial Committee], ed. Ikasarete ikite [Allowed to Live, I Live]. Nagasaki: Nagasaki heiwa suishin kyokai keisho bukai [Nagasaki Foundation for the Promotion of Peace Legacy Group], 2009.
“Ms. Mineko Douo.” In “My Unforgettable Memory: Testimonies of the Atomic Bomb Survivors.” Nagasaki Shimbun, March 14, 1996; updated October 19, 2005. Translated by Seiun High School. http://www.nagasaki-np.co.jp/peace/hibaku/english/05.html.
“Nyusu Nagasaki Eye [Nagasaki Eye News] No. 610.” DVD. NHK (Nippon Hoso Kyokai) broadcast, July 9, 2009.
NAGANO ETSUKO
Nagano, Etsuko. “Fifty Years from the End of World War II: My Experience of the Atomic Bombing.” In The Light of Morning: Memoirs of the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Survivors, 97–106. Nagasaki: Nagasaki National Peace Memorial Hall, 2005.
———. “Watashi no hibaku taikenki” [My Atomic Bomb Memory]. Unpublished speech, n.d. Copy provided by the Nagasaki Foundation for the Promotion of Peace.
———. Interview. White Light/Black Rain: The Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. DVD. Directed by Steven Okazaki. HBO Documentary Films, 2007.
Okuma, Takashi. “Nagasaki noto [Nagasaki Notes]: Nagano Etsuko-san: born 1928.” Pts. 1–13. Asahi Shimbun, June 29, 2010–July 11, 2010.
Roose, Diana Wickes. Teach Us to Live: Stories from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Pasadena, CA: Intentional Productions, 2007. See especially pp. 77–87.
TANIGUCHI SUMITERU
“Kurushimi no bokyaku osoreru/kaku, ningen to kyozon dekinu: Taniguchi-san enzetsu zenbun” [Fear That the Suffering Will Be Forgotten/Nuclear and Humans Cannot Coexist: Mr. Taniguchi’s speech in its entirety]. Asahi Shimbun, May 12, 2010.
“Genshi bakudan ketsuryo nisshi [Complete Daily Atomic Bomb Record for] Taniguchi Sumiteru. Omura National Hospital. November 1, 1945–March 20, 1949.” Unpublished medical record. Translated (from German to Japanese) by Asao Manabu, March 2006. Copy provided by Taniguchi Sumiteru.
“Mr. Sumiteru Taniguchi.” Testimony no. 2 and no. 3, Nagasaki and Peace: Testimonies of the Atomic Bomb Survivors, Nagasaki Broadcasting Company. Excerpts from interviews originally broadcast December 1968–October 1986. Translated by Geoff Neill. http://www2.nbc-nagasaki.co.jp/peace/.
Taniguchi, Sumiteru. Interview. Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Harvest of Nuclear War. VHS. Produced by Iwanami Productions. Tokyo, 1982.
———. Interview. Nagasaki Journey. DVD. Produced by Judy Irving and Chris Beaver. Oakland, CA: Independent Documentary Group, 1995.
———. Interview. People’s Century: Fallout (1945). Originally broadcast June 15, 1999. Public Broadcasting System. Transcript at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/peoplescentury/episodes/fallout/taniguchitranscript.html.
———. Interview. White Light/Black Rain: The Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, DVD. Directed by Steven Okazaki. HBO Documentary Films, 2007.
———. “Eternal Scars.” In Testimonies of the Atomic Bomb Survivors: A Record of the Devastation of Nagasaki, 46–48. Translated by Brian Burke-Gaffney. City of Nagasaki, 1985.
———. “Remembering for Twenty-Five Years: The Heat Rays That Burned a 16-Year-Old Back.” In The Light of Morning: Memoirs of the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Survivors, 89–96. Nagasaki: Nagasaki National Peace Memorial Hall, 2005.
———. “A Survivor’s Responsibility.” In Hibakusha: Survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 113–19. Translated by Gaynor Sekimori. Tokyo: Kohei Publishing Co., 1986.
———. “Twenty-Five Years Later: Memories and Evidence.” In Give Me Water: Testimonies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 52–54. Translated by Rinjiro Sodei. Tokyo: A Citizens’ Group to Convey Testimonies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 1972.
———. Unpublished speech. U.S. speaking tour representing Nihon Hidankyo (Japan Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Sufferers Organizations). Washington, DC, 1986.
———. “The Whole Surface of My Back Was Burnt.” In Voices of the A-Bomb Survivors: Nagasaki, edited by the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Testimonial Society, 86–91. Nagasaki: Showado Printing Co., 2009.
Townsend, Peter. The Postman of Nagasaki: The Story of a Survivor. London: Collins, 1984.
WADA KOICHI
Nakamura, Keiko. “Hamaguchimachi Stop (Nagasaki): Streetcar Shows Spirit of Nagasaki.” Daily Yomiuri Online, n.d., ca. 2005. Accessed August 2008. http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/.
Wada, Koichi. Interview. The Last Atomic Bomb. Directed by Robert Richter. New Day Films, 2006. Online streaming: http://www.newdaydigital.com/The-Last-Atomic-Bomb.html.
———. Interview. The Children of Nagasaki. DVD. Produced by Nippon Eiga Shinsha, Ltd. City of Nagasaki, March 2005.
———. “A Monument to 11:02 a.m.” In “Peace and Atomic Bomb: Atomic Bomb Survivors, Narratives of A-Bomb Experience.” Nagasaki City: Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, 2009. http://www1.city.nagasaki.nagasaki.jp/peace/english/survivors/koichi_wada.html.
———. “Nagasaki.” In Genbaku ju roku nen no koe [Sixty Years of Voices: Stories of the A-Bomb Survivors], edited by Imaishi Motohisa, translated by Christopher Cruz, 58–66. Hiroshima: Printed by author, 2005.
———. “There Was No ‘War-End’ in Nagasaki.” Unpublished excerpt from “Testimonies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 1988,” based on an interview conducted by the Nagasaki Testimony Seminar, group 3, n.d. Translated by the Nagasaki National Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic Bomb Victims.
YOSHIDA KATSUJI
Krakauer, Jon. “The Forgotten Ground Zero—Nagasaki, Reduced to Ashes by an Atomic Bomb, Rises Again in Beauty, Grace and Good Will,” Seattle Times, March 5, 1995. http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19950305&slug=2108264.
“Nyusu Nagasaki Eye [Nagasaki Eye News] No. 610.” In No More Hibakusha. NHK (Nippon Hoso Kyokai [Japan Broadcasting Corporation]), n.d. Accessed 2011. http://www.nhk.or.jp/no-more-hibakusha/hibakukoe/nagasaki005.html.
Okuma, Takashi. “Nagasaki noto [Nagasaki Notes]: Yoshida Katsuji.” Pts. 1–19, Asahi Shimbun, August 5, 2010–August 24, 2010.
Yoshida, Katsuji. “I Must Not Die.” Unpublished excerpt from Mou, iya da! [We’ve Had Enough!], vol. 1, n.d. Translated by the Nagasaki National Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic Bomb Victims.
———. Interview. White Light/Black Rain: The Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. DVD. Directed by Steven Okazaki. HBO Documentary Films, 2007.
———. Interview with Jerome McDonnell. “Nagasaki: A Survivor’s Story.” In Worldview. Translated by Geoff Neill. Chicago Public Radio, May 31, 2005. http://www.wbez.org/.
———. Interview with Watanabe Kuniko and Omoto Akiko. Produced by ANT-Hiroshima. DVD. February 18, 2009.
———. Interview. “Zenshin yakedo de seishi no saki wo samayo” [Lost on the Border between Life and Death with Whole-Body Burns]. NHK News broadcast, 2007.
———. Interview. “Atomic Bomb Survivor.” DVD. The History Channel, n.d. [2009?]. Copy provided by Yoshida Katsuji.
II. ADDITIONAL NAGASAKI HIBAKUSHA SOURCES
Hibakusha Interviews
Akizuki Sugako (Dr. Akizuki Tatsuichiro’s wife)
Anonymous (name withheld by request)
Fukahori Yoshitoshi
Hamasaki Hitoshi
Hirose Masahito
Matsuzoe Hiroshi
Miyazaki Midori
Shimohira Sakue
Uchida Tsukasa
Interviews and Conversations with Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Specialists and Researchers
(Titles at time of interview)
Akahoshi Masazumi, M.D., cardiologist and director, Department of Clinical Studies, Radiation Effects Research Foundation, Nagasaki
Brian Burke-Gaffney, professor, Nagasaki Institute of Applied Science
Fukushima Masako, Master File Section, Epidemiology Department, Radiation Effects Research Foundation, Nagasaki
Hashimoto Fujiko, administrator, Nagasaki University Atomic Bomb Disease Institute
Kinoshita Hirohisa, M.D., Ph.D., Department of Neuropsychiatry, Nagasaki University Hospital of Medicine and Dentistry
Koshimoto Rika, M.A., psychologist, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences
Matsuo Ranko, assistant section chief, Nagasaki Foundation for the Promotion of Peace
Mori Hideki, M.D., Ph.D., vice president, Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Hospital
Nakashima Seiji, social worker, Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Hospital
Geoff Neill, translator, Nagasaki National Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic Bomb Victims
Sakata Toshihiro, vice principal, Shiroyama Elementary School
Taira Mitsuyoshi, director, Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum
Takagi Rumiko, researcher, Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum
Tomonaga Masao, director, Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Hospital
Tsutsumi Fusayo, director, Megumi no Oka (Hill of Grace, Nagasaki A-Bomb Home)
Unpublished English Translations of Hibakusha Testimonies
The Nagasaki Foundation for the Promotion of Peace provided twenty-seven hibakusha testimonies and three testimony compilations, translated into English and printed by the Nagasaki National Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic Bomb Victims.
Published Memoirs and Testimony Collections
Abe, Kazue. Bearing a Small Cross. Japan: Kazue Inoue, 1995.
Akizuki, Tatsuichiro. Nagasaki 1945: The First Full-Length Eyewitness Account of the Atomic Bomb Attack on Nagasaki. Translated by Keiichi Nagata. Edited by Gordon Honeycombe. London: Quartet Books, 1981.
Bernstein, Michie Hattori. “Eyewitness to the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Blast.” WWII Magazine, July/August 2005. Published on historynet.com, June 12, 2006. http://www.historynet.com/michie-hattori-eyewitness-to-the-nagasaki-atomic-bomb-blast.htm.
Burke-Gaffney, Brian. “In the Words of an Atomic Bomb Survivor.” Crossroads: A Journal of Nagasaki History and Culture 3 (Summer 1995): 37–42. http://www.uwosh.edu/faculty_staff/earns/sakue.html.
The Deaths of Hibakusha, Vol. I: The Days of the Bombings to the End of 1945. Translated by the English Translation Group of “The Witness of Those Two Days.” Tokyo: Nihon Hidankyo, 1991.
The Deaths of Hibakusha, Vol. II: Forty Years Since 1946. Translated by the English Translation Group of “The Witness of Those Two Days.” Tokyo: Nihon Hidankyo, 1995.
Del Tredici, Robert. “Tsue Hayashi.” In At Work in the Fields of the Bomb, 189–91. New York: Harper & Row, 1987.
Fujisaki, Shinji, compiler. Burnt Yet Undaunted: Verbatim Account of Senji Yamaguchi. Tokyo: Nihon Hidankyo, 2002.
Give Me Water: Testimonies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Translated by Rinjiro Sodei. Tokyo: A Citizens’ Group to Convey Testimonies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 1972.
Hand Them Down to the Next Generations! Here Are Live Voices of Atomic Bomb Victims, Vol. I. Fukuoka, Japan: FCO-OP, 1995.
Hashimoto, Yutaka. “Mom and Silver Rice: Boyhood Reminiscences of the End of the War and Occupied Nagasaki.” Translated by Brendon Hanna. Crossroads: A Journal of Nagasaki History and Culture 4 (Summer 1996): 53–68. http://www.uwosh.edu/home_pages/faculty_staff/earns/silver.html.
Hibakusha: Hiroshima/Nagasaki. Tokyo: Nihon Hidankyo, 1982.
Hibakusha: Survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Translated by Gaynor Sekimori. Tokyo: Kohei Publishing Co., 1986.
Hiroshima/Nagasaki: After the Atomic Bomb, Vol. IV: Selected Haikus. Translated by Kemmoku Makato and Christopher Cliplef. Kobe, Japan: Kinoshita Press, 2006.
Hiroshima/Nagasaki: After the Atomic Bomb, Vol. V: Elegy for Nagasaki: 124 Tankas of Takami Oyama. Translated by Kemmoku Makato. Kobe, Japan: Kinoshita Press, 2006.
Ishitani, Susumu. “Looking for Meaning.” Friends Journal: 1945–95 Remembering Hiroshima and Nagasaki 41:8 (August 1995): 8–9.
Kamezawa, Miyuki, ed. The Unforgettable Day: Cries of “Hibakusha” from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 3rd ed. Nagoya, Japan: Group for Spreading Out “The Unforgettable Day” Over the World, 1995.
Kido, Sueichi. “I Desire to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.” Pamphlet. Nihon Hidankyo, May 2010.
Kobayashi, Shigeyuki, with Conan O’Harrow. War and Atomic Holocaust on Trial: Seeking an Enactment of a Law to Give Support to the Victims of the Atomic Bombings. Tokyo: Conference for the People of Setagaya, n.d. Copy provided by the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum Library.
Kubo, Mitsue. Hibaku: Recollections of A-Bomb Survivors. Translated by Ryoji Inoue. Coquitlam, B.C., Canada: Nippon Printing, 1990.
The Light of Morning: Memoirs of the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Survivors. Translated by Brian Burke-Gaffney. Nagasaki: Nagasaki National Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic Bomb Victims, 2005.
“Messages from Hibakusha for the 2010 NPT Review Conference.” Tokyo: Nihon Hidankyo, 2009.
Nagai, Takashi. Atomic Bomb Rescue and Relief Report. Edited by Fidelius R. Kuo. Translated by Aloysius F. Kuo. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Association for Hibakushas’ Medical Care, 2000.
———. The Bells of Nagasaki: A Message of Hope from a Witness, a Doctor. Translated by William Johnston. Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1984.
———, ed. Living Beneath the Atomic Cloud: Testimonies of the Children of Nagasaki. Compiled by Frank Zenisek. Translated by the Nagasaki Appeal Committee Volunteer Group. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Appeal Committee, 1985.
———. We of Nagasaki: The Story of Survivors in an Atomic Wasteland. Translated by Ichiro Shirato and Herbert B. L. Silverman. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1951.
Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Testimonial Society. Voices of the A-Bomb Survivors: Nagasaki. Foreword by Masahito Hirose. Nagasaki: Showado Printing Co., 2009.
Nagasaki Prefectural Girls’ High School 42nd Alumnae, ed. Footprints of Nagasaki: Excerpt from “Anohi Anotoki.” Translated by Yuriko Kitamura. Nagasaki: Seibonokishi-sha, 1995.
Nagatsu, Kozaburo, Hisao Suzuki, and Toshio Yamamoto, eds. Against Nuclear Weapons: A Collection of Poems by 181 Poets 1945–2007. Translated by Naoshi Koriyama et al. Tokyo: Koru Sakkusha, 2007.
Nakano, Michiko, ed. Nagasaki Under the Atomic Bomb: Experiences of Young College Girls. Tokyo: Soeisha/Sanseido Bookstore Ltd., 2000.
Nobuko, Margaret Kosuge. “Prompt and Utter Destruction: The Nagasaki Disaster and the Initial Medical Relief.” International Review of the Red Cross 89:866 (June 2007): 279–303.
Our Parents Were in Nagasaki on August 9, 1945. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Teachers’ Association of Children of Atomic Bomb Survivors, 1988.
The Pain in Our Hearts: Recollections of Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Okinawa. Tokyo: Soka Gakkai, Youth Division, 1975.
Roose, Diana Wickes. Teach Us to Live: Stories from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Pasadena, CA: Intentional Productions, 2007.
Selden, Kyoko, and Mark Selden. The Atomic Bomb: Voices from Hiroshima and Nagasaki. London: East Gate Books, 1989.
Shiotsuki, Masao. Doctor at Nagasaki: “My First Assignment Was Mercy Killing.” Translated by Simul International. Tokyo: Kosei Publishing Co., 1987.
Shirabe, Raisuke. “Medical Survey of Atomic Bomb Casualties.” The Military Surgeon 113:4 (Oct. 1953): 251–263.
———. “My Experience of the Nagasaki Atomic Bombing and an Outline of the Damages Caused by the Explosion.” 1986. Atomic Bomb Disease Institute, Nagasaki University, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. Accessed 2012. http://www-sdc.med.nagasaki-u.ac.jp/abcenter/shirabe/index_e.html.
———. A Physician’s Diary of Atomic Bombing and Its Aftermath. Edited by Fidelius R. Kuo. Translated by Aloysius F. Kuo. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Association for Hibakushas’ Medical Care, 2002.
Silent Thunder: From the Book “Te yo katare” (Let These Hands Speak). Translated by Brian Burke-Gaffney. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Prefectural Association for the Welfare of the Deaf and Dumb, Nagasaki Branch of the Japanese Study Group of Sign Language Problems, 1976.
Soka Gakkai, Youth Division, ed. Cries for Peace: Experiences of Japanese Victims of World War II. Tokyo: Japan Times, 1978.
Speaking of Peace I: Something We Want You to Know. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Foundation for the Promotion of Peace, 1990.
Testimonies from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 3rd ed. Kanagawa, Japan: Zushi Atomic Bomb Sufferers Association, 1995.
Testimonies of the Atomic Bomb Survivors: A Record of the Devastation of Nagasaki. Translated by Brian Burke-Gaffney. City of Nagasaki, 1985.
Trumbull, Robert. Nine Who Survived Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Personal Experiences of Nine Men Who Lived Through the Atomic Bombings. Tokyo: Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1957.
Vance-Watkins, Lequita, and Mariko Aratani, eds. White Flash/Black Rain: Women of Japan Relive the Bomb. Minneapolis, MN: Milkweed Editions, 1995.
Wasurerarenai anohi: The Day Never to Be Forgotten: A Collection of Testimonies and Pictures. Yokohama, Japan: Kanagawa Atomic Bomb Sufferers Association, 2005.
Wiesen, Mary, and Elizabeth Cannon, eds. Nagasaki August 9, 1945. Translated by Junshin Junior College English Club. Nagasaki: Junshin Junior College English Club, 1983.
The Witness of Those Two Days: Hiroshima & Nagasaki, August 6 & 9, 1945. 2 vols. Translated by the English Translation Group of “The Witness of Those Two Days.” Tokyo: Nihon Hidankyo, 1989.
Yamashita, Akiko. Natsugumo no oka: Hibaku ishi Akizuki Tatsuichiro [Hill Under the Summer Cloud: Atomic Bomb Physician Akizuki Tatsuichiro]. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Shimbunsha, 2006.
Yasuyama, Kodo. Collection of Memoirs of the Atomic Bombardment of Nagasaki 1945–55. Edited by Shunichi Yamashita. Nagasaki: Nagasaki Association for Hibakushas’ Medical Care, 2005.
Internet Collections
“Global Network.” The National Peace Memorial Halls for the Atomic Bomb Victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. February 2010. http://www.global-peace.go.jp/en/.
“Hibakusha: Atomic Bomb Survivors.” United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs. 2014. http://www.un.org/disarmament/content/slideshow/hibakusha/.
“Memories of Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Messages from Hibakusha.” Asahi Shimbun. September 2011. http://www.asahi.com/hibakusha/english/nagasaki/.
“My Unforgettable Memory: Testimonies of the Atomic Bomb Survivors.” Nagasaki Shimbun. Translated by Seiun High School. 2005. http://www.nagasaki-np.co.jp/peace/hibaku/english/index.html.
“Nagasaki and Peace: Testimonies of the Atomic Bomb Survivors.” Nagasaki Broadcasting Company. Excerpts of the radio program “Speaking of the Atomic Bomb” aired since the fall of 1968. Accessed 2008. http://www2.nbc-nagasaki.co.jp/peace/.
“Peace and Atomic Bomb—Atomic Bomb Survivors.” Nagasaki City. 2009. http://www.city.nagasaki.lg.jp/peace/english/survivors/index.html.
Pictorial Works
Asahi Graph. Special Issue. Asahi Shimbun, July 10, 1970.
Goldstein, Donald M., Katherine V. Dillon, and J. Michael Wenger. Rain of Ruin: A Photographic History of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Dulles, VA: Brassey’s, 1999.
Hiroshima-Nagasaki: A Pictorial Record of the Atomic Destruction. Tokyo: Hiroshima-Nagasaki Publishing Committee, 1978.
Jenkins, Rupert, ed. Nagasaki Journey: The Photographs of Yosuke Yamahata, August 10, 1945. San Francisco, CA: Pomegranate Art Books, 1995.
Kazuo, Kuroko, and Shimizu Hiroyoshi, eds. No More Hiroshima, Nagasaki. Translated by James Dorsey. Japan: Nihon Tosho Center Co. Ltd., 2005.
O’Donnell, Joe. Japan 1945: A U.S. Marine’s Photographs from Ground Zero. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press, 2005.
Rubinfien, Leo, Shomei Tomatsu, Sandra S. Phillips, and John W. Dower. Shomei Tomatsu: Skin of the Nation. San Francisco, CA: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in association with Yale University Press, New Haven, 2004.
Kurosaki, Haruo. Nagasaki shoukon ienumama-kunou no gojyuu nen wo ikite: shashin shuu [Nagasaki: Scarred and Not Yet Healed After Fifty Years of Anguish: A Photo Collection]. Nagasaki: Showa do insatsu [Showa Do Printing], 1995.
Genbaku hibaku kiroku shashin shu [A Photographic Record of the Atomic Bombing]. Nagasaki: Fujiki hakuei sha [Fujiki Hakuei Co.], 2001.
Documentary Films
The Children of Nagasaki. DVD. Produced by Nippon Eiga Shinsha, Ltd. City of Nagasaki, March 2005.
Dark Circle. DVD. Produced and directed by Chris Beaver, Judy Irving, and Ruth Landy. New York: Independent Documentary Group, 2006.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Harvest of Nuclear War. VHS. Produced by Iwanami Productions. Tokyo, 1982.
Hiroshima-Nagasaki, August 1945. VHS. Produced by Kazuko Oshima, Paul Ronder, and Erik Barnouw. Oakland, CA: Center for Mass Communication, Columbia University Press, 1980.
The Last Atomic Bomb. Directed by Robert Richter. New Day Films, 2006. Online streaming. http://www.newdaydigital.com/The-Last-Atomic-Bomb.html.
Nagasaki Journey. VHS. Produced by Judy Irving and Chris Beaver. Oakland, CA: Independent Documentary Group, 1995.
Survivors. VHS. Directed by Steven Okazaki. San Francisco, CA, 1982.
“Victor’s Plea for Peace: An American Officer in Occupied Nagasaki.” Television documentary. Produced by NHK World, 2001. http://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/english/tv/featured/ac/lineup.html. Copy provided by Patricia Delnore Magee.
White Light/Black Rain: The Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. DVD. Directed by Steven Okazaki. HBO Documentary Films, 2007.
III. SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Adler, Bill, ed., with Tracy Quinn McLennan. World War II Letters: A Glimpse into the Heart of the Second World War Through the Words of Those Who Were Fighting It. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2002.
Akizuki, Tatsuichiro. “The Nagasaki Testimony Movement.” In Literature Under the Nuclear Cloud, edited by Ito Narihiko, Komura Fujihiko, and Kamata Sadao, 41–46. Tokyo: Sanyusha Shuppan, 1984.
“All Elementary and Junior High School Students in Nagasaki Learn About Peace and the Atomic Bombing for Nine Years.” Dispatches from Nagasaki no. 2. Research Center for Nuclear Weapons Abolition (RECNA), Nagasaki University, August 30, 2012. http://www.recna.nagasaki-u.ac.jp/en-dispatches/no2/.
Applbaum, Kalman D. “Marriage with the Proper Stranger: Arranged Marriage in Metropolitan Japan.” Ethnology 34:1 (Winter 1995): 37–51.
Arms Control Association. “Fact Sheet: The Nuclear Testing Tally.” February 2007. Updated February 2013. http://www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/nucleartesttally.
Asada, Sadao. “The Mushroom Cloud and National Psyches: Japanese and American Perceptions of the Atomic Bomb Decision—A Reconsideration, 1945–2006.” In Culture Shock and Japanese-American Relations: Historical Essays, 207. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 2007.
———. “The Shock of the Atomic Bomb and Japan’s Decision to Surrender: A Reconsideration.” Pacific Historical Review 67:4 (November 1998): 477–512.
Ashworth, Fredrick L. “Dropping the Atomic Bomb on Nagasaki.” Proceedings of the U.S. Naval Institute 84:1 (1958): 12–17.
Atomic Bomb Disease Institute, Nagasaki University, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. 6th ed. Nagasaki: Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, 2004.
Atomic Bomb Disease Institute. The Medical Effects of the Nagasaki Atomic Bombing: 1945–2008. Nagasaki: Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, 2008.
Auxier, J. A. Ichiban: The Dosimetry Program for Nuclear Bomb Survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki—A Status Report as of April 1, 1964. Civil Effects Test Operations, U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. Washington, DC: U.S. Technical Services, April 1964. http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc13058/.
Barnouw, Erik. “Iwasaki and the Occupied Screen.” Film History 2:4 (November–December 1988): 337–57.
Beaver, Chris. “Notes on Nagasaki Journey.” Positions: Asia Critique 5:3 (Winter 1997): 673–85.
Beck, J. S. P., and W. A. Meissner. “Radiation Effects of the Atomic Bomb Among the Natives of Nagasaki, Kyushu.” American Journal of Clinical Pathology 6 (June 1946): 586.
Beijin kisha no mita Hiroshima Nagasaki [Hiroshima and Nagasaki Through the Eyes of American Reporters]. 7 vols. Akiba Project, 1981–1987. Collection of newspaper and journal articles in English, with Japanese translation. Hiroshima: Hiroshima International Cultural Foundation, 1982–1988.
Berlin, Richard B. “Impressions of Japanese Medicine at the End of World War II.” Scientific Monthly 64:1 (1947): 41–49.
Bernstein, Barton J. “An Analysis of ‘Two Cultures’: Writing About the Making and the Using of the Atomic Bombs.” Public Historian 12:2 (Spring 1990): 83–107.
———. “Compelling Japan’s Surrender Without the A-Bomb, Soviet Entry, or Invasion: Reconsidering the U.S. Bombing Survey’s Early-Surrender Conclusions.” Journal of Strategic Studies 18:2 (1995): 101–48.
———. “Introducing the Interpretive Problems of Japan’s 1945 Surrender: A Historiographical Essay on Recent Literature in the West.” In The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals, edited by Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, 9–64. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007.
———. “Reconsidering Truman’s Claim of ‘Half a Million American Lives’ Saved by the Atomic Bomb: The Construction and Deconstruction of a Myth.” Journal of Strategic Studies 22:1 (1999): 54–95.
———. “Seizing the Contested Terrain of Early Nuclear History.” In Hiroshima’s Shadow: Writings on the Denial of History and the Smithsonian Controversy, edited by Kai Bird and Lawrence Lifschultz, 163–196. Stony Creek, CT: Pamphleteer’s Press, 1998.
———. “The Struggle over History: Defining the Hiroshima Narrative.” In Judgment at the Smithsonian, edited by Philip Nobile, 127–256. New York: Marlowe and Company, 1995.
———. “Truman and the A-Bomb: Targeting Noncombatants, Using the Bomb, and His Defending the ‘Decision.’” Journal of Military History 62 (July 1998): 547–70.
Bird, Kai, and Lawrence Lifschultz, eds. Hiroshima’s Shadow: Writings on the Denial of History and the Smithsonian Controversy. Stony Creek, CT: Pamphleteer’s Press, 1998.
Bix, Herbert P. Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan. New York: HarperCollins, 2000.
Bohlmann, Rudi. Interview with Curt Nickisch. “Nagasaki Aftermath Haunts U.S. Veteran.” All Things Considered. National Public Radio, August 9, 2007. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=12638594.
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———. “Hiroshima and Nagasaki: The Voluntary Silence.” In Living with the Bomb: American and Japanese Cultural Conflicts in the Nuclear Age, edited by Laura Hein and Mark Selden, 155–72. New York: M. E. Sharpe, 1997.
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