Gavan McCormack
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The Emptiness of Japanese Affluence
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16 editions
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published
1996
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Target North Korea: Pushing North Korea to the Brink of Nuclear Catastrophe
5 editions
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published
2004
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Client State: Japan in the American Embrace
8 editions
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published
2007
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Chang Tso-lin in Northeast China, 1911-1928: China, Japan, and the Manchurian Idea
3 editions
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published
1977
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The Burma-Thailand railway: Memory and history
4 editions
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published
1993
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Korea, North and South: The Deepening Crisis
by
3 editions
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published
1980
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The Japanese Trajectory: Modernization and Beyond
by
4 editions
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published
1988
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New Left Review 64 July/Aug 2010
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Cold war, hot war: An Australian perspective on the Korean War
2 editions
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published
1983
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Democracy in Contemporary Japan
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4 editions
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published
1986
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“Liu was taken at bayonet point from his Shandong village in 1944 and sent to work in the Showa coal mine in Hokkaido. Unlike those at Hanaoka who rose up in rebellion, he fled into the mountains. He escaped in July 1945, just about one month before the end of the war, but he was so terrified that he remained in hiding, living off grasses and nuts, and occasionally descending to the remote coastline to collect seaweed, less afraid of bears than of human beings, and with no knowledge that the war was over, until he was by chance discovered by a rabbit trapper in 1958. When he emerged, not only was the war over, but Kishi Nobosuke, the Tojo Cabinet's Minister for Commerce and Labor, who had been responsible for the forced-labor program, had become prime minister. When Kishi's government ordered an investigation of Liu on suspicion of illegal entry into the country, Liu published a famous statement of protest and then returned to China. As of the early 1990s, he was still pursuing his case for justice against the Japanese government, and still waiting for a response from it.”
― The Emptiness of Japanese Affluence
― The Emptiness of Japanese Affluence
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