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War Without Mercy: Race and Power in the Pacific War

Author: John W. Dower
List Price: $17.95
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Avg.Rating:
(42 reviews)
Sales rank: 4874

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156 in stock

Media:
Edition: 1st Paperback Ed.
Reading Level:
Pages: 416
Number Of Items:
Shipping Weight (lbs): 140
Dimensions (in): 610 x 900 x 90

ISBN: 0394751728
EAN: 9780394751726
ASIN: 0394751728

Publication Date: 1987-02-12
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours





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Editorial Reviews:

Now in paperback, War Without Mercy has been hailed by the New York Times as "one of the most original and important books to be written about the war between Japan and the United States." In this monumental history, Professor John Dower reveals a hidden, explosive dimension of the Pacific War -- race -- while writing what John Toland has called "a landmark book...a powerful, moving, and even-handed history that is sorely needed in both America and Japan."

Drawing on American and Japanese songs, slogans, cartoons, propaganda films, secret reports, and a wealth of other documents of the time, Dower opens up a whole new way of looking at that bitter struggle of four and a half decades ago and its ramifications in our lives today. As Edwin O. Reischauer, former ambassador to Japan, has pointed out, this book offers "a lesson that the postwar generations need most...with eloquence, crushing detail, and power."




Customer Reviews:

A Victim of Hatred Jul 14, 2010

I can't speak to the prejudice of the Americans since I was a little girl in an internment camp under the Japanese during WWII.
The disdain for us "white, non asian" people was so obvious, you could taste it. I was only a little girl but I knew the Japanese didn't think much of us. They treated us as second class citizens who should be ashamed to be alive. They did every thing they could to hurt and mistreat us, including beatings beyond belief. Do I believe there was prejudice???? Yes, ofcourse! We hated the "Japs" as much as they hated us. Love and hate go both ways.

Oh, please! May 03, 2010

Even if the author's conclusions are valid (which as often as not, they are not), so what? Why do so many people insist on refracting everything through a prism of their own making? John Dower may be a pretty smart guy, but he has no credential for purporting to know more about the history of the Pacific war than the people who actually created that history. Their chronicles are ubiquitous, exhaustive, and remarkably consistent, and thoroughly at odds with most of Dower's contrived conclusions.

Ride the zeitgeist ere it tramples you.

Polemic against American attitudes toward Japanese in WWII.. Feb 11, 2010

I read this book with some interest but left with the feeling that the author was trying to make an anti-racist statement rather than compile good history. He understates the Japanese mistreatment of other Asians and basically blames the ferocity of the war on American racial attitudes while failing to attribute appropriate weight to Japanese fanaticism. If you were compiling a large library on the subject you should have this book, but if you are looking for reasonable explanations of the Pacific War it's not so good.

Unflinching Look At The Role of Racism in World War II Sep 28, 2009

Dower later wrote another great book, "Embracing Defeat," about the US Occupation of Japan after WW II. This earlier work is a detailed and powerful examination of how racism on both sides had a major effect on the coming of war. Dower particularly points out institutional and legal racism in the United States, and in the League of Nations, that most Western histories of the Pacific War completely ignore. It is always easier to look at the other guy's sins and ignore our own. One way of doing this is by pretend that Pearl Harbor happened out of the blue, and that America and the European empires (that occupied almost all of Africa, and much of Asia at the time) did nothing to provoke an attack. Dower has the courage to look in the mirror, and asks other Americans to do the same. Otherwise, he says, the chances are good we will repeat past mistakes. The current tendency to demonize Moslems and Arabs is an obvious signal that he's right.

An Important Look at Japan's and the USA's Racial War Sep 11, 2009

John W. Dower's insightful work, "War Without Mercy, Race & Power in the Pacific War", offers a unique perspective on World War II in the Pacific theater. Rather than a standard military or political history of the conflict, Dower focuses on the racial hatred that prevailed on both sides, and how this in turn led to a harder, tougher war. Dower illustrates, through political cartoons, letters from soldiers to those back home, and various types of national media just how each side looked down upon the other. For instance, Dower writes that before the war Americans' almost uniformally looked down upon the Japanese as inferiors, but after their successes at Pearl Harbor and against the British, this view was replaced with that of the Japanese superman whose military skill was matched only by his barbarity. This perception was again replaced at the end of the war with the view of the Japanese tamed Monkey, which allowed Americans to adopt a paternalistic attitude to their defeated foes. Conversely, the Japanese portrayed the Americans before the war as being merchants, interested solely in money and trade and unwilling to fight a protracted war in the Pacific. Once the USA entered the war in earnest and began making serious inroads into Japan's conquests, the Japanese portrayed Americans as a barbaric horde intent on murder and rape.

Both sides accused the other of barbarity, and there certainly is much to back up the claim for both. The Bataan death march and the Rape of Nanking will forever stand as witnesses against Japanese cruelty. Perhaps just as shocking was the (albeit limited) practice of American service men sending the skulls of Japanese enemies to sweethearts back home for use as paperweights.

This racial aspect of the war is important to remember and shares its infamy with the Nazi-Soviet war in Europe. Dower does fail, however, to put this racial war into the larger context of military and political realities of the day. He decries American bombings of Japanese cities as a product of this racial hatred, but fails to appreciate, or at least comment upon, their military necessities. Sudden, dramatic horror quickly delivered was believed during the war, quite correctly, to spare a greater and more protracted horror in the long run. Without Hiroshima and Nagasaki an invasion of the Japanese islands would have been necessary, resulting conservatively in ten times the casualties of the atom bombs. Dower fails to properly put this into perspective.

Despite this weakness, this is an important books and sheds light upon this aspect of the war. In a world where racial and religious hatred still abound and continue to threaten war, Dower's message seems very timely.


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