Rating: Not rated
Tags: History, Lang:en
Summary
Sexual slavery, human experimentation, mass murder, use of
bacteriological and chemical weapons, the crimes committed in
the name of Emperor Showa are countless. Still seen in the West
as a puppet emperor used by unscrupulous military leaders to
further their expansionist designs, Emperor Showa, generally
known in the West by his personal name, Hirohito, remains one
of the most controversial figures in modern history. Since 1946, the image of a nervous little man wearing a
badly cut civil servant’s cardigan and awkwardly saluting
his subjects with a wave of his hat, an intellectual cut off
from the real world, emerging from his laboratory only to
ratify the decisions made in his name by a mainly faceless
military clique, dominated the collective imagination. Historians wishing to confront the “imperial
hostage” thesis by invoking the wording of the Japanese
Constitution that described the emperor as the “Head of
the Empire” and the “Supreme Commander of the Army
and Navy” collided for nearly 40 years with the
“chrysanthemum curtain” erected in front of the
imperial throne. The death of the Emperor in 1989, finally made
it possible to lift up a few corners of this veil, leading in
turn to the publication of a series of studies that for the
first time revealed in broad daylight the true aspects of his
role and personality. “Showa: Chronicles of a Fallen God” is directly
inspired by these studies and brings to life a monarch directly
involved in government policies and totally aware of the crimes
committed in his name by the military. This work also focuses
on the tremendous propaganda campaign jointly carried out by
the Japanese government and the American occupation command to
exonerate the imperial family and protect countless war
criminals in their fight against communism. The novel is divided in four chapters, taking place from
1936 to 1946, and covering Japan’s plan to conquer the
Far East, the military operations that resulted in the death of
nearly 30 millions people and the policies that led to the
defeat of the “Land of the Gods” and her shameful
occupation by U.S. troops. . **