The term "atomic bomb literature" came into wide use in the 1960s.[2]
Writings affiliated with the genre can include diaries, testimonial or documentary accounts, and fictional works like poetry, dramas, prose writings or manga about the bombings and their aftermath.
Yōko Ōta's short story Katei no yō na hikari ('A light as if from the depths') was published on 30 August 1945 in TheAsahi Shimbun, making it the first published literary text on the atomic bomb.[5] The following month, by directive of the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers, the censorship of topics like the atomic bomb in the media came into operation,[5] with the effect that books dealing with this topic, like a poetry collection of Sadako Kurihara[5] or Yōko Ōta's novel City of Corpses,[6] initially appeared only in abridged form.
In 1983, Holp Shuppan published the 15-volume Nihon no Genbaku Bungaku (日本の原爆文学, lit.'Japanese Atomic Bomb Literature'), which contained fictional and nonfictional writings by the most prominent exponents of the genre.
Essays on the Red Circle Authors website also included works by non-Japanese authors in the atomic bomb literature cycle, like John Hersey's Hiroshima, which was originally published in The New Yorker in 1946.[2][7] Still, anthologies like Nihon no Genbaku Bungaku or The Crazy Iris and Other Stories of the Atomic Aftermath are confined solely to Japanese writers.
Selected works
Yōko Ōta (大田洋子): Kaitei no yō na hikari (海底のような光, short story published in The Asahi Shinbun, 1945)
^ abTreat, John Whittier (1995). Writing Ground Zero: Japanese Literature and the Atomic Bomb. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
^ abcIto, Narihiko; Schaarschmidt, Siegfried; Schamoni, Wolfgang, eds. (1984). "Ein Licht wie auf dem Meeresgrund". Seit jenem Tag. Hiroshima und Nagasaki in der japanischen Literatur. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer.
^Minear, Richard H., ed. (1990). Hiroshima: Three Witnesses. Princeton University Press. pp. 117–142. ISBN978-0691055732.
^Hersey, John (31 August 1946). "Hiroshima". The New Yorker. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
Bibliography
Nihon no Genbaku Bungaku. Tokyo: Holp Shuppan. 1983.
Ōe, Kenzaburō, ed. (1985). The Crazy Iris and Other Stories of the Atomic Aftermath. New York: Grove Press.
Goodman, David, ed. (1986). After Apocalypse: Four Japanese Plays of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. New York: Columbia University Press.
Hersey, John (2009). Hiroshima (new ed.). London: Michael Joseph Ltd.
Further reading
Haver, William (1997). The Body of This Death: Historicity and Sociality in the Time of AIDS. Stanford University Press.