Historian John W. Dower's celebrated investigations into modern Japanese
history, World War II, and U.S.-Japanese relations have earned him
critical accolades and numerous honors, including the Pulitzer Prize,
the National Book Award, and the Bancroft Prize. Now Dower returns to
the major themes of his groundbreaking work, examining American and
Japanese perceptions of key moments in their shared history.
Both provocative and probing, Ways of Forgetting, Ways of Remembering
delves into a range of subjects, including the complex role of racism on
both sides of the Pacific War, the sophistication of Japanese wartime
propaganda, the ways in which the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki is remembered in Japan, and the story of how the postwar study
of Japan in the United States and the West was influenced by Cold War
politics.
Ways of Forgetting, Ways of Remembering offers urgent insights by one
of our greatest interpreters of the past into how citizens of democracy
should deal with their history and, as Dower writes, "the need to
constantly ask what is not being asked."