Showing 161 - 180 results of 211 for search '"Hiroshima"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
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    Événement et trauma dans Doctor Atomic de John Adams by Mathieu Duplay

    Published 2011-04-01
    “…John Adams’s 2005 opera Doctor Atomic, written in collaboration with Peter Sellars, is a case in point, not only because it deals with one of the most violent traumas in 20th‑century history—namely the nuclear test conducted at Los Alamos prior to the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki—but also because, in addition to offering a potent meditation on the unthinkable, it reveals that all events, be they historical or aesthetic, call for new and as yet unformulated modes of thought ; as psychoanalysis suggests (sometimes in spite of itself), this is a clear sign of their traumatic nature.…”
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  4. 164

    The Firebombing of Tokyo: Views from the Ground by Cary Karacas, Bret Fisk

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…In stark contrast to the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, however, historians and other scholars working in the English language have paid little attention to the tremendous societal impact - both immediate and long-lasting - of the destruction by firebombing of Japan's cities. …”
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  5. 165

    Remembering the Atomic Bomb in its Birthplace, New Mexico by Lucie Genay

    Published 2017-01-01
    “…The Trinity date does not hold the same place in collective memory as Hiroshima and Nagasaki but its historical significance takes various shapes on different memory scales. …”
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    Une terreur par l’image by Annie DULONG

    Published 2011-09-01
    “…Contrary to some of the major twentieth century historical events, which required, to be put into fiction, that some blanks were filled – the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, or the situation in Germany’s concentration camps–, the fictionalization of the September 11th, 2001 events involves not filling the gaps due to a lack of visual archives or a delay in their release, but working with the immediacy and repetitiveness of their omnipresence on television and the Internet. …”
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