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This Man is Your Friend: Knowing "Us" and "Them" in Ethnic American Literature of the Pacific TheaterMatsuda, Takuya 05 1900 (has links)
This dissertation examines representations of the Pacific theater in World War II in ethnic American literature, with a focus on its rendition of US and Japanese racism and imperialism in the mid-twentieth century. Reading a range of African, Asian, Jewish, Mexican, and Native American literary writings, I investigate their modifications of the American master narrative that the Second World War was "good" and "necessary," a war fought against fascism and for democracy, justice, and freedom. Instead of such a simplistic and reductive view, ethnic American writers envision the Pacific theater as a race war between whites and persons of color and as a conflict between two imperialist nations, the United States and Japan. Ethnic Americans' racial double consciousness functions to resist an oversimplification of the Pacific theater. In these ethnic writers' work, American characters from diverse backgrounds create friendships with those of Asian nationalities, including Chinese, Filipinos, Koreans, and Japanese. These texts are necessary because ethnic Americans' experiences are underrepresented in the traditional WWII narrative of Western masculinity, originated by Ernest Hemingway and completed by President Truman and Douglas MacArthur. As opposed to the typical white American literary and cinematic treatment of the war as fought in the land of the diabolical and inscrutable enemy, ethnic American authors depict diverse experiences of both soldiers and civilians in the Pacific theater. While rendering Asia as a multifaceted but close and relatable place, they depart from both the Orientalist concept of Asia as a single entity and the Eurocentric production of WWII knowledge in the US.
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Learning under fire: a combat unit in the Southwest PacificPowell, James Scott 30 October 2006 (has links)
Engaging a determined enemy across a broad range of conditions, the U.S. Army in
World War II's Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA) played an important role in the defeat of Japan.
How units fought and learned in SWPA and how they adapted to the evolving challenges of their
environment is the focus of this dissertation. The subject remains largely unexplored, especially
in contrast to the attention the European theater has received. An examination of the 112th's
performance not only illuminates an understudied area in the historiography of World War II but
also offers relevant lessons for contemporary military organizations.
Mining a rich collection of primary sources, this study analyzes the development of the
112th Cavalry Regiment and sheds light on how American units in SWPA prepared for and
conducted combat operations. A National Guard unit federalized in 1940 and sent to the Pacific
theater in 1942, the 112th performed garrison duties on New Caledonia and Woodlark Island and
eventually fought in New Britain, New Guinea, and the Philippines. Before deactivating, the
regiment also served in Japan during the first months of the occupation.
Concentrating on one unit illustrates the extent to which ground forces in SWPA were
driven to learn and adapt. The 112th had mixed success when it came to carrying out its
assigned missions effectively. The same was true of its efforts to learn and improve. The unit's
gradual introduction to combat worked to its advantage, but learning was not simply a matter of building on experience. It also involved responding to unexpected challenges. Experience
tended to help, but the variety of circumstances in which the cavalrymen fought imposed limits
on the applicability of that experience. Different situations demanded that learning occur in
different ways. Learning also occurred differently across the organization's multiple levels.
Moreover, failure to learn in one area did not, as a matter of course, undermine advancement in
all. Much depended on the presence of conditions that facilitated or disrupted the learning
process, such as the intricacy of the tasks involved, the part higher headquarters played, and the
enemy's own responses to the changing environment.
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Extermination Warfare? The Conduct of the Second Marine Division at SaipanHegi, Benjamin P. 05 1900 (has links)
Historians John W. Dower, Craig Cameron, and Ronald Takaki argue that the Pacific War was a war of extermination fueled by race hate. Therefore, the clash between the military forces of the Japanese Empire and United States of America yielded a "kill or be killed" environment across the battlefields of the Pacific. This work examines the conduct of the Second Marine Division during its campaign of conquest against the Japanese held island of Saipan from June 15, 1944-July 9, 1944. It is based upon traditional military history sources to test their theories in context of the conduct of Marines toward Japanese soldiers and civilians during the Saipan campaign. Did Marines practice a war of extermination or conduct themselves in a humane manner?
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