Preface: Retrospect and Prospect in Northeast Asia’s History Wars
1. Introduction: History Wars in Postwar East Asia, 1945-2014
2. Remembering Colonial Korea in Postwar Japan
3. The Politics of Inclusion and Exclusion in Postcolonial Japan: State, Shrine, and Honor for Ethnic Veterans, the Fallen, and their Bereaved
4. The “East Asian History” Elective in Korean High Schools: An Attempt at Reflective Education in Transnational Space
5. Japanese Textbooks in the Asian History Wars: The Waning Importance of Weapons of Mass Instruction
6. The Controversy over the Ancient Korean State of Gaya: A Fresh Look at Korea-Japan History War
7. Young Poets under the Shadow of War: Yun Dong-ju and Tachihara Michizō
8. Oda Makoto and Literary Reconciliation: The Rise of Civil Societies in Japan and Korea in the Wake of the Asia-Pacific War
9. “Comfort Women Bashing” and Japan’s Social Formation of Hegemonic Masculinity.>.