Saturday, December 18, 2021

Barefoot Gen: An Analysis

For our third blossay, I chose to review Barefoot Gen (Hadashi no Gen) directed by NAKAZAWA Keiji, a short animated film on the Little Boy bomb dropped on Hiroshima, and the related manga. As a forewarning, I do recommend people to watch this – however there are significant trigger warnings to be aware of, including the display of the animation of the bomb and its impacts on human bodies. With that said, I will move into a short synopsis of the film.

The film opens with a short explanation on the context of the war leading up to 6 August 1945, the day the Little Boy was dropped. It explains that Japan’s mainland has come under fire from terror bombing, a tactic used to essentially bomb an area into surrender from demoralization and terror due to the political and industrial infrastructure being hamstrung or more often obliterated. One might recall back to Grave of the Fireflies (Hotaru no Haka) on the firebombing of Kobe that we watched earlier this semester as a prime example of the nature of terror bombing. The film continues with the protagonist, Gen Nakaoka and his family all discussing this and wondering why they haven’t been attacked yet, as the cities surrounding them have received no small of bombing and aerial terror. The family lives in poverty, struggling to make ends meet and having to let Gen and his siblings often go hungry, particularly so their pregnant mother Kime can eat. She sickens due to malnourishment and Gen and his little brother Shinji end up stealing a large carp (koi) to feed her, as their neighbor Bokusan tells them the blood is incredibly nutritious, although they are caught by the owner. He eventually lets them take the fish and explains to their parents what good sons they have, and to treat them well; they are the prime example of what many at the time would’ve called dutiful, good sons that honor their family. They bring it home and their mother eats it, and all seems somewhat well. Then the bomb is dropped on 6 August. Gen is knocked out and later comes to, and discovers the corpse of a classmate. He makes his way onto the street, shouting for help, or even just to find people – and a crowd of wounded come stumbling out of the fog, who are so disfigured that Gen thinks they are hungry ghosts, spirits in Japanese folklore who have come back from the dead due to their lives being unfulfilled. He makes his way back to his mother, who is trying to save their family from the wreckage of their house; sadly, they fail to do so, and the husband, Shinji, and sister die. Kime soon after gives premature birth to a baby girl they name Tomoko due to the shock of the bomb, and Gen tries to find sustenance for them both. They are discovered by Ryuta Kondo, another survivor, who looks like Shinji, and they take him in. The Japanese government surrenders after another bomb is dropped on Nagasaki. The two eventually find work taking care of an older man suffering from severe burns and make enough money to buy several bags of canned milk. They make their way back to Gen’s mother and Tomoko, who has died due to extreme malnourishment. Gen, Ryuta, and Kime set a tiny boat, much like one Shinji and Gen built and agreed to sail the morning of 6 August, floating down the nearby river, and the film ends.

Barefoot Gen displays an important reality of war – it is hellish, ugly, and brutal. The level of violence that is done to human bodies by atomic warfare is horrifying, from the crowd of survivors walking out of the mist that remind one of George Romero’s zombies, to people jumping in the river to find some level of relief. The violence extends to killing people Kime and Gen try to help by giving them water to drink, only for them to die of the shock that it triggers within their bodies. It extends to victims getting maggots in their burn scars and wounds. It extends to the anxiety Gen experiences when he finds his hair falling out and pictures in his mind’s eye the soldier he tried to save who died of pika and becomes fearful of the same thing happening to him, crying in his mother’s arms that he doesn’t want to die. We see Gen call out to his dead father and siblings numerous times throughout the later half of the film to update them of various things – Tomoko being born and later dying, for example. I think it’s also interesting that Gen immediately blames himself for Tomoko’s death, when she was likely doomed from birth. Premature births are no easy condition to tend to even in hospital, let alone near ground zero after an atomic blast where the child would be affected by the residual radiation and black rain. She appears quite small even for a baby, and I have to wonder if this might be indicative of a really low birth weight, one of the major factors in determining whether a premature infant will survive. In summary, the level of violence inflicted by the bomb extends far beyond the immediate death toll of 80,000 people taken in the blast.

The manga expands on a few plot points that were not quite as well explained in the movie. For one, Gen’s father’s antiwar views and opinions of patriotism get explained a lot more in the manga, as are the punishments for holding these views. The leadup to the bombing is better paced, as well – interspersed with Gen’s life is explanation of the development of Little Boy, as well as frames of a clock ticking on the day of the bombing leading up to that horrific moment. It creates an anxiety over what is about to happen, despite the fact that one likely knows what’s coming. Another difference is that in the manga, Kime and Gen watch their family burn to death, whereas in the film they are obscured by falling timber.

It was equal parts horrific and interesting to learn that the film is a mostly autobiographical work of Nakazawa’s experiences surviving the bombing of Hiroshima and his life as a hibakusha. In an interview with MOTOFUMI Asai, he expands upon his experiences – in one part he explains that his mother was alone in watching their family burn. In a public outing near the end of his life reflecting on his work and legacy, he remarks that “What can’t people understand?  We are living with the danger of total annihilation…  What a stupid thing.  We want a world without nuclear weapons, and we hibakusha pass this torch on to you.  I am 72.  I will die.  Go back to the U.S. and tell a lot of people what you learn here” (Cassano). It is horrifying to think that soon, there will be no one left to tell people of their experiences as hibakusha. We must not forget their stories, even if we can’t understand nor ever will understand the pain and the agony and the suffering these poor people underwent. We must continue to tell their stories, for the hibakusha are a dying people – just over a mere 120,000 remain of which I’m sure COVID-19 has helped cut down, out of the million that survived the blast. We have to pick up that torch and tell our families, friends, and mere strangers of the horrors of atomic warfare, otherwise history will be forgotten and repeated, and that cannot be allowed to happen.

 

 

References:

“Bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.” History.com, A&E Television Networks, 18 Nov. 2009, https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/bombing-of-hiroshima-and-nagasaki.

Cassano, Carly. “Keiji Nakazawa's Barefoot Gen, Hiroshima Peace Memorial, Japan: Literary Traveler.” Literary Traveler | Explore Your Literary Imagination, 21 Jan. 2013, https://www.literarytraveler.com/articles/barefoot-in-hiroshima/.

Nakazawa, Keiji, and Asai Motofumi. “Barefoot Gen, the Atomic Bomb and I: The Hiroshima Legacy.” Translated by Richard H. Minear, The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus, The Asia-Pacific Journal, 2021, https://apjjf.org/-Nakazawa-Keiji/2638/article.pdf.

Nakazawa, Keiji. “Manga: Barefoot Gen Volume 01.” Internet Archive, Internet Archive, 2021, https://archive.org/details/manga_BarefootGen-v01.

Yamaguchi, Mari. “Hiroshima Marks 76th Anniversary of US Atomic Bombing.” AP NEWS, Associated Press, 6 Aug. 2021, https://apnews.com/article/2020-tokyo-olympics-sports-health-coronavirus-pandemic-bombings-a58423a31cc48ce49f142f3cc71eeffe.

 

Saturday, October 30, 2021

The Ballad of Ho Chi Minh

 

Hello everyone! Today I’ll be writing about “The Ballad of Ho Chi Minh” by Ewan MacColl – but first, a little background on this character and our singer. Ho Chi Minh was a Vietnamese military commander during the early stages of the conflicts leading up to the Vietnam War, after which he became a politician, eventually rising to Chairman and First Secretary of the Workers’ Party of Vietnam and the Prime Minister of the country. The song was written in 1954 – Minh’s forces had just succeeded in driving out the French military at Dien Bien Phu, and the United States and its allies were not pleased. Western countries painted Minh as a tyrant just starting out on his path to glory, doubtlessly comparing him to the likes of Stalin. MacColl did not believe the hype, however, and was particularly frustrated with the way Western propaganda represented him; accomplishing such a feat with very little supplies and being outnumbered, resulting in driving out invaders from one’s home ought, to be praised as the stroke of military genius it was. MacColl himself was a Scotsman, a note I find particularly interesting, as Scotland has suffered to no end under the British since their imperialism and invasion of the country in the early 1500’s. I think this is a particularly significant note in the song’s numerous anti-imperialist sentiments, and I think it’s at least somewhat likely that MacColl identified with the struggles of the Vietnamese against the French. 

Here is a video link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjzMWumVhV8

The lyrics are as follows

[Verse 1]

Far away across the ocean

Far beyond the sea's eastern rim

Lives a man who is father of the Indochinese people

And his name, it is Ho Chi Minh

[Chorus]

Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh

Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh

[Verse 2]

From Viet Bac to the Saigon Delta

From the mountains and the plains below

Young and old workers, peasants and the toiling tenant farmers

Fight for freedom with Uncle Ho

[Chorus]

[Verse 3]

Ho Chi Minh was a deep sea sailor

He served his time out on the seven seas

Work and hardship were part of his early education

Exploitation, his ABC’s

[Chorus]

[Verse 4]

Ho Chi Minh came back from sailing

And he looked on his native land

Saw the want and the hunger of the Indochinese people

Foreign soldiers on every hand

[Chorus]

[Verse 5]

Ho Chi Minh went to the mountains

And he formed a determined band

Heroes all sworn to free the Indochinese people

Drive invaders from the land

[Chorus]

[Verse 6]

Forty men became a hundred

A hundred thousand and Ho Chi Minh

Forged and tempered the army of the Indochinese people

Freedom's Army of Viet Minh

[Chorus]

[Verse 7]

Every soldier is a farmer

Comes the evening, he grabs his hoe

Comes the morning, he swings his rifle on his shoulder

That's the army of Uncle Ho

[Chorus]

[Verse 8]

From the mountains and the jungles

From the rice lands and the Plain of Reeds

March the men and the women of the Indochinese Army

Planting freedom with victory seeds

[Verse 9]

From Viet Bac to the Saigon Delta

Marched the armies of Viet Minh

And the wind stirs the banners of the Indochinese people

Peace and freedom and Ho Chi Minh

[Chorus]

[Outro]

Ho!

I think what particularly drew me off the bat to this song was the way MacColl portrays the fighters in Minh’s army right from the start of the song – they are every-day people. They’re hard-working, tough, and do some incredibly tough jobs, or what we might call blue collar. They are quite literally the picturesque proletariat that immediately comes to mind when reading Das Kapital or The Communist Manifesto. These every-day heroes push against the invaders on every hand, and find the strength to do so in spite of lacking for food and adequate supplies. Eventually he forms an army out of ragtag farmers and peasants that effectively defends their home – not unlike the American Revolutionary movement, come to think of it. In terms of the actual music – melody, harmony, and so on – it’s pretty simple stylistically. I hear one acoustic guitar and a lot of vocals – it seems almost as if it was written to be easily performed by working people, who wouldn’t be likely to invest a lot in quality of instruments or variety thereof. The song was incredibly popular around the world, most notably in North Vietnam, and showed that there were some Western citizens that did not see Minh’s movement as a communist threat.

Monday, September 27, 2021

 

Hello everyone! Today I’ll be writing about my maternal great-grandfather, Adam Penich – or as he was more colloquially known to my sister Katie and I, Poppop. He served in 1942-1945 as a member of the 1049th Engineers Gas Generating Unit in the US Army Air Corps, meaning that he was one of many units who rebuilt towns the progression of the war had destroyed. Specifically, his unit followed behind the Army and rebuilt whatever it had been through. Poppop served in the Naples-Foggia campaign, the Rome-Arno campaign, southern France, and the Rhineland, a section of West Germany near the River Rhine. He rose to the rank of Technical Sergeant and received four medals in total for his service. As far as I can tell from talking to family members, he never was involved in combat, nor gave his opinions on the war or the act of war itself. He was, according to my maternal grandmother and aunt, one of those guys that didn’t want to discuss such things. Sadly enough, he passed back in 2011 so he’s not exactly available to ask interview or anything like that. As such I think it may be appropriate to move to my reflections on war, as I’ve always been interested in war history for as long as I can remember, and thus I’ve had an interest in both studying it and forming my opinions.

 

First of all, you guys know I’m pretty anti-war; I think I’ve made that about as clear as possible without climbing on a table with a sign or something. If you haven’t figured out I’m anti-war, I’m not sure where you’ve been. That being said – I think war can be justified. The problem is that inevitably, with the way the military-industrial complex is set up, there is always a profit incentive for private companies to be involved in war and benefiting from its continuation. Since before this country’s inception, the military and militias have been used to bully, coerce, displace, and slaughter whomever it considered in the way and disposable without much trouble. In the 1600’s-1897, it was the Native Americans who lived with the land and found a way to use their resources without undermining them – a lesson we would have done well to try to learn long ago – who were pushed out of the way and obliterated, eventually pushed onto “reservations” and considered barely second-class citizens. In the early- to mid-1900’s, it was the various peoples of South America, the Caribbean, and parts of Asia whose countries and land were trampled and destabilized for the economic interests of rich white men on Wall Street. From the 80’s onward it has been the people of various Middle East countries whose countries have been fought over and in by, again, white American and European men. There is quite a difference between helping and a thin façade of aid and generosity helping cover up greed and political motivations, a difference we haven’t yet nor will ever find. To that end, we as the public must continually put increasing pressure on our elected officials for increasing transparency, organize and continue protesting. The 19th Amendment would not have been enacted without the protests of many women. Recall that it was people at colleges, in academic institutions, in non-governmental organizations and transnational advocacy who forced the likes of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher (among others) to turn to South Africa and say “you have to find a different way to live, because apartheid is not an ethical system upon which to live”. There is power in knowledge and willingness to fight for justice. That has been and will be our hammer and sickle upon which we will move the monoliths governing our society and world towards enacting some semblance of justice in this disordered world.

Barefoot Gen: An Analysis

For our third blossay, I chose to review  Barefoot Gen (Hadashi no Gen) directed by NAKAZAWA Keiji, a short animated film on the Little Boy...