The Change Of Imperialism In John Dower's War Without Mercy

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John Dower’s War Without Mercy documents racial factors, the ideology between the United States and Japan, and relations in the pacific during World War II. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, American media began to attack the Japanese in the forms of propaganda, political cartoons, and music. Dower argues that it was racial fear on both the Japanese and American side that fueled policy, how to deal with their wartime enemy, and its role in the change of perception to the Japanese and Americans. Even when the war ended, Dower explained how the racial stereotypes evolved to fit in post war occupied Japan, and back in the United States. Though Dower’s arguments are sound, some could be seen as historically inaccurate or even theoretical and not fact. Within Chapter seven of his book, Dower explains how Japan survived opening its gates to the western world and the ability to resist being swallowed by western imperialism. In fact, Japan flourished and began an imperialism of its own, as well as succeeded in the defeat of the Russians in the Russo-Japanese war. Though, with all of these great accomplishments, the Japanese were still not respected in the west. Dower explains this by stating: “ These accomplishments naturally drew special attention and consideration to the Japanese from Europeans and Americans, even …show more content…

Dower stated that the “Yellow Peril was naturally the stuff of fantasy and cheap thrills, a fit subject for pulp literature, comics, B movies, and sensational journalism.” Dower puts forth examples of those who pushed the Yellow Peril in the form of Dr. Fu Manchu. Created by Sax Rohmer, Dower explained that Rohmer, “created a fictional personal of oriental genius so flamboyantly sinister that even people who did not read the novels or see the films based on them could recite not merely the name of the villain, but the name bracketed by marvelously venomous

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