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Left-wing Origins of the 'Nuclear Power State' and the Emergence of the 'the only country ravaged by the atomic bombs' Discourses
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Left-wing Origins of the 'Nuclear Power State' and the Emergence of the 'the only country ravaged by the atomic bombs' Discourses

논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
서동주 (서울대학교)
저널정보
한국일본학회 일본학보 일본학보 제132호 KCI등재
발행연도
2022.8
수록면
205 - 234 (30page)

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Left-wing Origins of the 'Nuclear Power State' and the Emergence of the 'the only country ravaged by the atomic bombs' Discourses
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In this article, analyzed in the context of the global Cold War was the logic and aspects of transformations on what perceptions of atomic energy (nuclear energy) the left-wing in post-war Japan had during the formation of an atomic power state. For example, the Japanese Communist Party clearly maintained the position of pro-Soviet Union after 1948 in the competition between the United States and the Soviet Union on the nuclear development. But the Party adopted the ‘peaceful use of atomic energy’ as the official view of the Party in 1954, and as a result, made a political choice to cooperate in forming a ‘nuclear power state’ system. A physicist named Mitsuo Taketani cannot be left out when talking about the perception of nuclear power by the Japanese left after the war. This is because he was a scientist who had an absolute influence on the Japanese Communist Party's perception of nuclear power and a prominent commentator on the peaceful use of nuclear power. However, after the “Daigo Fukuryumaru” bombing incident in 1954, Taketani’s views gradually moved away from the Communist Party. That did not mean that he withdrew his support for the use of nuclear power in peace. Rather, they argued that nuclear power can be safely used in Japan because Japan is the “only atomic bomb”. Afterwards, as ‘the only country exposed to radiation = Japan' was established as a self-representation representing Japan after the war, the dynamics of the Cold War surrounding nuclear energy were post-hardened, and the ‘safety myth’ that Japanese people who had experience of exposure to nuclear power could control the risks of nuclear energy was born And this ‘safety myth’ formed the social and psychological foundation that supported the ‘nuclear power state’.

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