Academic literature on the topic 'Bataan death march, philippines, 1942'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bataan death march, philippines, 1942"

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Thompson, Jan. "Making "The Tragedy of Bataan": The Bataan Death March through the Lens of a Filmmaker." Journal of American-East Asian Relations 18, no. 3-4 (2011): 215–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187656111x614265.

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AbstractThe television and radio documentary "The Tragedy of Bataan" uses extensive interviews with survivors to bring the 1942 Bataan Death March to life for contemporary viewers. The filmmaker, whose father was a POW in the Philippines, describes the process of gathering the interviews and putting them together into a compelling story. She describes the film strategy of having the men and women involved tell the story in their own words, with no historians or experts on camera; explains how a documentary film differs from a written monograph; and explores the constraints set by television an
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Murphy, Kevin. ""To Sympathize and Exploit": Filipinos, Americans, and the Bataan Death March." Journal of American-East Asian Relations 18, no. 3-4 (2011): 295–319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187656111x609199.

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AbstractThe Bataan Death March of 1942 has entered historical consciousness as one of the ultimate measures of Japanese wartime barbarity. At a level bound up with deference to the veterans who experienced such hardship, a compelling reality emerges: Helpless Americans marched under the watchful eyes and cruel bayonets of the Japanese oppressor, and the Filipinos, in despair over the defeat of their defenders, wept in sympathy as they watched. The pattern reinforces pleasing notions of a benevolent colonial relation, the "good war" against a barbarous enemy, and loyal allies enlisted in a righ
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West, Patrick Leslie. "Towards a Politics and Art of the Land: Gothic Cinema of the Australian New Wave and Its Reception by American Film Critics." M/C Journal 17, no. 4 (2014). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.847.

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Many films of the Australian New Wave (or Australian film renaissance) of the 1970s and 1980s can be defined as gothic, especially following Jonathan Rayner’s suggestion that “Instead of a genre, Australian Gothic represents a mode, a stance and an atmosphere, after the fashion of American Film Noir, with the appellation suggesting the inclusion of horrific and fantastic materials comparable to those of Gothic literature” (25). The American comparison is revealing. The 400 or so film productions of the Australian New Wave emerged, not in a vacuum, but in an increasingly connected and inter-mix
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Books on the topic "Bataan death march, philippines, 1942"

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Burroughs, Dallas. The story of Dallas Burroughs: As told by Dallas, over the course of five interviews, to Sharon Curtin between, July 4, 2009 and August 14, 2009. [Sharon Curtin], 2012.

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Meyer, Milton Walter. A Bataan Death March pilgrimage redux. The Paige Press, 2009.

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3

Charles, Leavelle, ed. Bataan death march: A survivor's account. University of Nebraska Press, 2002.

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4

Nieva, Antonio A. Cadet, soldier, guerilla fighter: Remembering Bataan and Corregidor. Pepi Nieva, 2016.

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Duggan, William J. Silence of a soldier: The memoirs of a Bataan Death March survivor. Elderberry Press, 2003.

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6

Greenberger, Robert. The Bataan Death March: World War II prisoners in the Pacific. Compass Point Books, 2009.

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Tenney, Lester I. My hitch in hell: The Bataan death march. Brassey's, 1995.

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M, Norman Elizabeth, ed. Tears in the darkness: The story of the Bataan Death March and its aftermath. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2009.

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9

Fraser, G. Thomson. In the claw of the tiger: Based on the true story of World War II POW and survivor of the Bataan Death March Franklin "Porky" LaCoste. Xlibris, 2007.

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Fraser, G. Thomson. In the claw of the tiger: Based on the true story of World War II POW and survivor of the Bataan Death March Franklin "Porky" LaCoste. Xlibris, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bataan death march, philippines, 1942"

1

Casey, Steven. "The Return." In The War Beat, Pacific. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190053635.003.0011.

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MacArthur finally returned to the Philippines in October 1944, accompanied by fifty-eight correspondents—the largest number to join a Pacific invasion at that stage of the war. Initially, the campaign to retake the island of Luzon did not go well, but a combination of MacArthur’s optimistic communiqués and a major naval victory in the Battle of Leyte Gulf ensured that his return contributed to Roosevelt’s reelection victory a month later. After the invasion of Leyte in January 1945 led first to the liberation of the camps containing Bataan death march survivors and then to the bloody slaughter during the battle for Manila, the home front’s animosity toward Japan hardened.
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Casey, Steven. "Atrocities." In The War Beat, Pacific. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190053635.003.0007.

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For the first two years of the war, the government was extremely reluctant to release information about the atrocities being committed by the Japanese. Officials warned returning civilian internees not to speak to the press about the conditions they had faced as Japanese prisoners. The Office of Censorship applauded the media’s restraint in covering the execution of American airmen captured after the Doolittle raid. And even when Ed Dyess escaped from the Philippines with details about the Bataan death march, senior officials prevented his story from being told. The Chicago Tribune, which paid Dyess $21,000, lobbied hard for a policy change, to no avail. Only after Dyess’s tragic death in a plane crash at the end of 1943, followed by a threat to have a friendly legislator read his story into the Congressional Record, did the government finally lift the veil on this dimension of the Pacific War.
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Masuda, Hiroshi, and Reiko Yamamoto. "The Second Bataan Operation and the Death March, Early February to Early May 1942." In MacArthur in Asia. Cornell University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9780801449390.003.0007.

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"7. The Second Bataan Operation and the Death March, Early February to Early May 1942." In Better Must Come. Cornell University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/9780801455544-008.

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"7. The Second Bataan Operation and the Death March, Early February to Early May 1942." In MacArthur in Asia. Cornell University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/9780801466199-008.

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