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引用次数: 3
摘要
与它的人道主义形象相反,Hidankyo,即日本原子弹和氢弹受害者组织联合会,几十年来一直参与反对国家的政治争议。本文回顾了20世纪50年代中期至80年代初不为人知的Hidankyo运动的历史,介绍了该组织是如何与50年代中期的禁止核武器运动相联系而形成的,以及如何克服60年代冷战政治引发的组织危机而发展成为具有明确政策要求的独立社会运动组织的。Hidankyo的运动口号“不再有原子弹爆炸”(no more hibakusha)并不是自然而然地从原子弹爆炸受害者的经历中产生的,而是在他们与对手(最重要的是日本政府)的斗争中得到证实的。
"Ban the Bomb! Redress the Damage!": The History of the Contentious Politics of Atomic Bomb Sufferers in Japan
Contrary to its humanist image, Hidankyo, the Japan Confederation of Atomic and Hydrogen Bomb Sufferers Organizations, has engaged in contentious politics against the state for decades. This article traces the little-known history of the Hidankyo movement from the mid-1950s to the early 1980s, introducing how this organization formed in relation to the movement to ban nuclear bombs in the mid-1950s and how it grew into an independent social movement organization with clear policy demands after overcoming an organizational crisis triggered by the Cold War politics of the 1960s. The movement slogan for Hidankyo, “no more hibakusha,” did not naturally emerge from the sufferers’ experience with the atomic bombings, but was substantiated through their struggles to confront their adversaries, most importantly the Japanese government.