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'Give back the human': poetic collaboration and hibakusha poems

journal contribution
posted on 2016-03-01, 00:00 authored by Cassandra AthertonCassandra Atherton
Testimonies are viewed as essential for recording the experience of atomic warfare. However, hibakusha Keiko Ogura expresses the need for something more than recording and translating these testimonies. She highlights the need for an understanding of the hibakusha experience through a form of virtual collaboration with hibakusha and their stories. Ogura states that this is best achieved via ‘literature, art and poetry’ (Ogura 2015: n.pag.).

This paper discusses why and how we speak about the atomic bomb and argues that virtual collaboration with hibakusha, by writing poetry based on their experiences and publishing it online, encourages empathy and keeps the experience alive for future generations. This paper uses Brandon Shimoda’s curated issue—entitled ‘Hiroshima/Nagasaki’—of Evening Will Come, a monthly online journal of poetics, as a case study.

History

Journal

Axon: Creative Explorations

Issue

10

Pagination

1 - 1

Publisher

IPSI: University of Canberra

Location

Canberra, A.C.T.

ISSN

1838-8973

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, The Author

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