跨国记忆与福岛灾难——澳大利亚反核运动中的日本记忆

Q3 Social Sciences
A. Brown
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文论证了跨国记忆在福岛灾难后澳大利亚反核行动主义框架中的重要性。日本在跨国核想象中显得举足轻重。纪念广岛是澳大利亚反核运动中第一次在战时使用核武器的地方,这是一种长期的做法,这一天与包括武器和铀矿开采在内的各种问题有关。随着澳大利亚在20世纪70年代开始向日本出口铀,澳日关系对从其土地上提取铀的土著传统所有者来说具有了新的意义。福岛事件后,这些复杂的跨国记忆构成了土著土地权利活动家对日本的定位和整个反核运动的基础。本文认为,尽管两国之间的组织联系脆弱,但跨国记忆促使澳大利亚反核活动人士在福岛灾难后寻求与日本的联系。这些集体记忆的动员有助于我们理解跨国社会运动是如何演变的,以及它们是如何在亚太地区从底层构建全球化的
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Transnational Memory and the Fukushima Disaster: Memories of Japan in Australian Anti-nuclear Activism
This paper argues for the importance of transnational memories in framing Australian anti-nuclear activism after the Fukushima disaster. Japan looms large in the transnational nuclear imaginary. Commemorating Hiroshima as the site of the first wartime use of nuclear weapons has been a long-standing practice in the Australian anti-nuclear movement and the day has been linked to a variety of issues including weapons and uranium mining. As Australia began exporting uranium to Japan in the 1970s, AustraliaJapan relations took on a new meaning for the Indigenous Traditional Owners from whose land uranium was extracted. After Fukushima, these complex transnational memories formed the basis for an orientation towards Japan by Indigenous land rights activists and for the anti-nuclear movement as a whole. This paper argues that despite tenuous organizational links between the two countries, transnational memories drove Australian anti-nuclear activists to seek connections with Japan after the Fukushima disaster. The mobilisation of these collective memories helps us to understand how transnational social movements evolve and how they construct globalisation from below in the Asia-Pacific
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
审稿时长
52 weeks
期刊介绍: PORTAL Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies is a fully peer reviewed journal with two main issues per year, and is published by UTSePress. In some years there may be additional special focus issues. The journal is dedicated to publishing scholarship by practitioners of—and dissenters from—international, regional, area, migration, and ethnic studies. Portal also provides a space for cultural producers interested in the internationalization of cultures. Portal is conceived as a “multidisciplinary venture,” to use Michel Chaouli’s words. That is, Portal signifies “a place where researchers [and cultural producers] are exposed to different ways of posing questions and proffering answers, without creating out of their differing disciplinary languages a common theoretical or methodological pidgin” (2003, p. 57). Our hope is that scholars working in the humanities, social sciences, and potentially other disciplinary areas, will encounter in Portal scenarios about contemporary societies and cultures and their material and imaginative relation to processes of transnationalization, polyculturation, transmigration, globalization, and anti-globalization.
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