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Kazuma Obara: Silent Histories

Kazuma Obara: Silent Histories

First Edition, 2014. Book measures 7.5 x 10.25 inches. Limited edition of 45 handmade copies. Softcover signature sewn book, laid into cloth-covered board portfolio. Includes 3 side-stapled facsimile publications published by the Japanese government between 1938-1945. This "Weekly Photography Magazine" was a propaganda tool, and there were 370 total issues. In these issues, the magazine shows citizens how to protect themselves from aerial bombings.

Silent Histories is a testimony to the tragedy of indiscriminate bombing by US forces during the War in the Pacific, which killed 330,000 Japanese and injured 430,000 more. The figures are imposing: some 9.7 million left homeless and more than 2.23 million homes destroyed in more than 200 different cities. In the midst of this enormous destruction, many children were orphaned in an instant or suffered burning or mutilations that marked them for life. Japan achieved its economic recovery in the wake of wartime devastation. This remarkable growth has been dubbed the “Japanese economic miracle.” In spite of this unprecedented prosperity, however, children with war injuries have been forced to live harsh lives, unable to cure their wounds. They have lived in the shadows, concealing their pain, hiding their scars, and sparing others the discomfort of seeing them.
Photographer Kazuma Obara (born 1985) sheds light on these “silent histories” with a collection of sensitive portraits of six survivors interspersed with historical and personal material, including school photographs, views of Japanese cities in 1945, personal snapshots and government-issued disability cards. A powerful and moving document.

This is a Limited Edition of 45 hand numbered and signed copies. A Fine Copy.

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