Title: From Experience to Representation: Stories of Hiroshima Bombing
1From Experience to Representation Stories of
Hiroshima Bombing
"Little Boy" --the atomic bomb dropped on
Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. "Fat Man" --dropped
on Nagasaki August 9, 1945.
- Summer Flower 1947
- Human Ashes 1966
- Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959)
2Outline
- Introduction
- From Experience to Representation to Reader
Response - Hiroshima Literature
- two generations Oe vs. Mishma
- First responses
- Summer Flower (a widower for one year)
- "Human Ashes (a boy reaching puberty)
- Hiroshima mon amour a Japanese man and a French
woman
3Trauma Texts From Experience to Representation
- The Work of Memory (like Dream)
- Mediation
Representation as Acting-out (re-enactment) or
Working-through (understanding and
contextualization)?
4 5Trauma Texts From Experience to Representation
- Recollection
- Experience turned to images, which then get
accumulated in the folds of our minds, our eyes
and urban landscape (//history as palimpses)
6Trauma Texts From Representation to Reader
Response
- Mediation
- fact selection emplotment
- dramatization, visualization
- 2. Self-Projection
- 3. Contextualization
Reader Response as Acting-out , Working-through
or Mere Consumption?
7Trauma Texts From Representation to Reader
Response
- Historical Facts
- Personal Accounts
- Personal Record
- Usually less attractive than filmic
dramatization or news spectacles - image fragments on the news ? for consumption or
genuine understanding
8How do we respond to spectacles?
Image
A man stands on a roof as he awaits rescue in
heavy flooding in Taimali, south-eastern Taiwan's
Taitung county on August 8, 2009 during Typhoon
Morakot. (AFP/AFP/Getty Images)
p. 18 A Female Negro Slave with a Weight Chained
to her Ankle, from Narrative of a Five Years
Expedition Against the Revolted Negroes of
Surinam 1772-77, 1796 John Stedman
9Between the Trauma Spetacles Ai-Hsin(Mustard
Seed) Childrens Home
- Equation?
- Purposeful actions in a local context
http//www.mustard.org.tw/ah_home/news.asp
10Hiroshima literature according to Kenzaburo Oe
(?????)
- First generation witness account or realistic
descriptions of the victims - second- generation survivors with a broader
perspective, acknowledge clearly that Japan and
the Japanese were partly to blame (as aggressors
in the Pacific War, and also their invasion of
China). (Introduction Crazy Iris)
11Kenzaburo Oe (?????) vs. Yukio Mishma (?????)
my limited knowledge
- Yukio Mishma wrote Patriotism, formed the
Tatenokai (Shield Society), a private army
composed primarily of young students who studied
martial principles and physical discipline, and
swore to protect the Emperor - -- staged a coup to perform the suicidal rite of
seppuku. - Kenzaburo Oe -- The Day He Himself Shall Wipe My
Tears Away an ill father (with a growth
resembling mushroom/chrysanthemum) who fantasizes
about having a coup to kill the emperor and blame
it on the Americans
12First Reactions
- First Responses to the bombing in the two
stories - It came all of a sudden p. 38 p. 68-69
- lack of understanding, puzzled at not seeing
holes 42 flame and gasoline from the sky --
helpless 45 - losing contact with the surrounding, numbness
(the boys terror 70, a groups numbness 73) - Bewilderment p. 39 someone rushed in
- Senseless actions
13First Reactions
- Common signs
- Burned bodies, houses, twisted trees (40)
- First reactions
- Disgust at injuries (infected body 41 two
injured women 45 nausea at seeing Mr. Nakayama
71 - Wandering or escaping to the river
- First actions
- leaving the city
- some helpful, some unable to help (the shelters
by a dispensary 49 the boys being dragged out
of the line 83) - Main concerns
- Search for ones family members or the teachers
wife
14Hara Tamiki ??? (1905-1951)
- An English major familiar with Russian lit,
wrote poems himself, too. - Summer Flower in 1947
- The Land of Heart's Desire in 1951.
- -- A suicide note in the form of an account of
troubled dreams recalling memories of the
Hiroshima bombing. - -- The author committed suicide in 1951, when
there were rumors about the use of A-Bomb in the
Korean war.
His works (in Japanese) http//www.aozora.gr.jp/i
ndex_pages/person293.html
15Summer Flower (1947) Human Ashes (1969)
- What are their main themes? What are the details
that stick in your mind? - Do you see any artistic transformation of the
events? - Compared with Summer Flower, does the narrator
in Human Ashes show greater distance from, or
better understanding of, the event? - Why does Human Ashes take a diary form? Do you
see other literary techniques here?
16Summer Flower (1947)
- A straightforward account of scenes witnessed by
the author after the bomb was dropped on
Hiroshima. The story begins with the narrator
visiting the graves of his wife (with incense and
flowers) and parents three days earlier, and
concludes with a friend searching for his wife's
remains mingled with the bones of her pupils in
the ruins of the girls' school where she taught. - The narrator with suicidal thought What had
been threatening me, what had been destined to
happen, had taken place at last. I could
consider myself as one who survived. I have to
keep a record of this (41).
17Summer Flower Verbal Construction of
non-verbal memories
- Central Pattern
- Plot wandering and searching (to satisfy basic
needs), amidst the injured, broken pieces and
corpses. ? picked up by the eldest brother (50) - Irony the wifes grave, flower and incense as
the only sign of beauty and grace memory of
childhood a peaceful scene p47 - ? Images the tree 40 the ruins of his house
The Fall of the House of Usher sounds
voices(46-47) - ? Images Fumihiko 51 corpses 51 (haunting
rhythm) - ? Ns experience 53-54
18Summer Flower Verbal Construction of
non-verbal memories (2)
- Central Pattern
- Irony Images the sight of the living green,
true miseries began after the escape (52) - Poem ? open ending
19Katsuzo Oda Human Ashes (1969)
- a boys experience of displacement and his
adolescent desires Two dreams kamikaze vs.
physical desires ? lonely 64-65 - Contrasts
- avoiding his aunt (listless, displaced), 63-64 ?
looking for the aunt 79 - Respect for soldiers/authorities (teachers
upperclassman) and even kamikaze (?????) the
role of the military 64 a soldier in uniform
kicking a student 65-66 ? Ichikawa and the other
one 67- ? Dragonfly 69 the lieutenant Yamane
71 the student 73 Ichikawa? P. 72 a rowdy
student 73 - The teacher 70-71 ? the teachers wife 82
20Katsuzo Oda Human Ashes (1969)
- Contrasts
- Destruction of human bodies
- feeling his own body 73
- naked women no longer sensible or attractive
(74) - vs. survival of nature (84)
21Human Ashes (1969)
- Other Ironies
- People losing their mind (72 74)
- People unable to help each other p. 74 violent
when it gets to getting food (crackers) ? - Order and calm only apparent p. 76
- nightmare of childhood 84
- Ash-Covered bodies with oil and sweat, streams of
blood (76) ?Human ashes (burial ritual) 84
22Hiroshima mon amour (1959)
- What is the film about?
- -- The atomic destruction of Hiroshima and the
psychological consequences of World War II?
Director Alain Resnais  ScriptMarguerite
Duras Actors Emmanuelle Riva  Eiji
Okada
23General Introduction Background
- 1959 the beginning of French New Wave also
the year when Godard's Breathless, Truffaut's The
400 Blows were released. - Resnais By 1959 Resnais had produced a lot of
documentaries e.g. 1955 Night and Fog, which
Godard has called a documentary on the memory of
Auschwitz. - After seeing the documentaries already produced
on Hiroshima, Resnais changed his mind, asking
Duras to write the script for him.
24General Introduction Impossibility of Historic
representation
- Reenacting the pain and horror of such events
cannot be portrayed in a documentary manner - such representation is possible only if it is
mediated through human experiences of love and
death. - Plot -- the sexual tryst between the French
actress, who is married, and her Japanese lover,
an architect who is also married,
25General Introduction Structure and Plot
- But the story goes deeper as they dig up her
past, and they have a mutual recognition. - five panels (not labeled, as such in the film
itself) Prologue, Night and Morning, Day, The
Café by the River, and Epilogue. -
26General Introduction Structure and Plot (2)
- five panels (not labeled, as such in the film
itself) Prologue, Night and Morning, Day, The
Café by the River, and Epilogue. -
27Starting Questions
- What does the beginning shots of the film mean?
And the opening sequence? - "You saw nothing in Hiroshima. Nothing," "I saw
everything.... Every thing." What does she see?
28Remembering and Seeing
- Bodily memory, or enactment of ones memory.
(bodies in sex bodies covered by atomic ashes) - Opposed to the visualization of memories
hospital, museum (with photos and artifacts),
peace square, newsreel, and a film about "peace.
- The reconstructions were as authentic as
possible. The films were as authentic as
possible. - what else can a tourist do but weep?
- I saw them. I saw the newsreel
- Like you, I Know what it is to forget. Like
you, I forgot.
29What she sees
- Hospital with patients averting their faces,
documentaries, Hiroshima park and museum
30Hiroshima at the present time
31Lui (Him) and Elle (Her)
- Both traumatized
- I was never younger than I was in Nevers.
- Why Nevers?
- I somehow understand that it was there that I
almost lost you and ran the risk of never. ever
meeting you. somehow understand that it was
that you began to be who you are today. - ? enactment of the past with him.
32Her traumatic moment liberation of Nevers
- Fragmentation narration driving at the central
event He was my first love - I couldn't find the slightest between his dead
body and my own.
33Example from enactment to working thru
- She I think of you but I no longer speak of it
- He Madwoman!
- She Madly in love with you. My hair grows back.
- He Are you ashamed for them, my love?
- She You are dead. I'm too busy suffering.
Night falls. - I hear nothing but the sound of the scissors on
my head. It eases the pain of your death a bit.
Like _ I don't know how else to say Like for
my nails... the walls... my anger. What a pain - He And then one day. my love. your eternity
comes to an end. A long time. They said it was
a long time. One day I hear themthe cathedral
bells . -
34Example from enactment to working thru
- My life that goes on,
- your death that goes on.
- Its horrible! I remember you less and less
clearly. - (remembers the death again)? screams ? feel the
warmth of a marble
35Forgetting the past
36Torn between the Past, the Present and future
forgetfulness
37Saying Goodbye to both the Past or the present?
- Walking thru Hiroshima, with flashbacks of
Nevers. - Elle I consigned you to oblivion.
- Lui Were sad about leaving each other
38Self-Othering
- Casablanca (Hollywood film) // the woman as a
desirable object increase the inevitable
distance between him and her
39The ending
- What does it mean to call each other by the name
of their cities?
40References
- Summer Flower (in Japanese) http//www.aozora.gr
.jp/cards/000293/files/1821_6672.html - The Crazy iris and other stories of the atomic
aftermath Google Books