Ōkunoshima and Japan’s Chemical Arsenal: 1900-1945
Japanchemical warfarehistory of sciencelogisticsWorld War II
Bibliografia
‘Hiroshima Peace Media Center’, Hiroshima Peace Media Center, accessed 11 November 2017, http://www.hiroshimapeacemedia.jp/?p=52294.
Coleman, A History of Chemical Warfare. 54-55, 59.
Eiko Takeda, Chizu kara kesareta shima: Ōkunoshima doku gasu kōjō (Tokyo: Domes shuppan, 1987). 94.
Gō Miyatake, Shōgun No Yuigon: Endō Saburō Nikki (Tokyo: Mainichi shinbunsha, 61). 77.
Gunjika, ‘Rikugun Zōheishō Kagaku Heiki Seizō Kikan Haichi Ni Kan Suru Ken’, 1927, Rikugunshō mitsu dainikki S2-1-9, The National Institute for Defense Studies, Ministry of Defense, https://www.jacar.archives.go.jp.
Harushi Nakane and Michiyo Arakawa, ‘Shōgen kaigun doku gasu kōjō no hibi’, Chūkiren, July 2010, 50–59. 52.
Haruyoshi Hasegawa, ed., Nihon rikugun kayaku shi (Tokyo: Ōhikai, 1969). 187.
Hiromi Mizuno, Science for the Empire: Scientific Nationalism in Modern Japan. (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2011). 156.
Kagaku heiki no riron to jissai, 1936, in Kamata, ‘Tsūfun no genjō wo aruku kyū nihon gun no doku gasu wo seisō shite ita Hiroshima’. 32.
Kankyōshō, ‘Shōwa 48 Nen No “Kyū Gun Doku Gasu Tama Nado No Zenkoku Chōsa” Foro-Appu Chōsa Hōkoku Sho’ (Tokyo: Kankyōshō, 31 March 2003), https://www.env.go.jp/chemi/report/h15-02/index.html.kan. 22-43.
Kei’ichi Tsuneishi, ‘C. Koizumi: As a Promoter of the Ministry of Health and Welfare and an Originator of the BCW Research Program’, Historia Scientiarum, no. 26 (March 1984): 95–113. 102.
Kei’ichi Tsuneishi, ‘The Research Guarded by Military Secrecy’, Historia Scientiarum, no. 30 (March 1986): 79–92. 81.
Mark Peattie, ‘Japan’s Defeat In The Second World War: The Cultural Dimension’, in War and Militarism in Modern Japan: Issues of History and Identity., ed. Guy Podoler (Leiden: Brill, 2009), 111–19. 112.
Matsuno, Nihon gun no doku gasu heiki. 114.
Matsuno, Nihon gun no doku gasu heiki. 118.
Matsuno, Nihon gun no doku gasu heiki. 237.
Matsuno. 31.
Paul F. Walker, ‘A Century of Chemical Warfare: Building a World Free of Chemical Weapons’, in One Hundred Years of Chemical Warfare: Research, Deployment, Consequences, ed. Bretislav Friedrich et al. (Cham: Springer, 2017), 379–400. 380.
Peattie, ‘Japan’s Defeat In The Second World War: The Cultural Dimension’. 113.
Ramesh Chandra Gupta, ed., Handbook of Toxicology of Chemical Warfare Agents (Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2009). 18.
Rikugun gun i gakkō 50 nen shi, Fuji shuppan [1988] (Tokyo: Rikugun gun i gakkō, 1936). 138. See notably Yoshiaki Yoshimi and Toshiya Ikō, Nana san ichi butai to tennō rikugun chūō (Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1995)., Herbert P. Bix, Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan, 1st ed (New York: Harper Collins, 2000).
Rikugun zō hei shō shi (Tokyo: 1941) in Tatsumi, Kakusaretekita ‘Hiroshima’: doku gasu shima kara no kokuhatsu. 171.
Ross Allen Coen, Fu-Go: The Curious History of Japan’s Balloon Bomb Attack on America, Studies in War, Society, and the Military (Lincoln, NB: University of Nebraska Press, 2014).
Seiya Matsuno, Nihon gun no doku gasu heiki (Tokyo: Gaifūsha, 2005). 85.
Takashi Fujitani, Geoffrey M. White, and Lisa Yoneyama, eds., Perilous Memories: The Asia-Pacific War(S) (Durham, N.C: Duke University Press, 2001). 7.
Takeda, Chizu kara kesareta shima: Ōkunoshima doku gasu kōjō. 167.
Takeda, Chizu kara kesareta shima: Ōkunoshima doku gasu kōjō. 87.
Tanaka, ‘Nihon doku gasu sen no rekishi’. 212.
Tanaka, ‘Nihon doku gasu sen no rekishi’. 216, Yoshimi, Doku gasu sen to nihon gun. 14.
Tanaka, ‘Poison Gas, the Story Japan Would like to Forget’. 12.
Tatsuya Yamamoto and Daisuke Kusanagi, Nihon no kagaku heiki 1, hōheiyō gasudan no hyōshiki to kōzō (Gifu: Zen nippon gunsō kenkyūkai, 2010). 12.
Teijin no ayumi, vol. 5 (Teijin, 1970). 194-217.
The first planned use of gas (non-lethal) dates back to the attempted military coup of February 26, 1936. The rebels surrendered before gas was fired.
The name refers to the round, ocular spaces of the gas mask, reminiscent of the cephalopod’s body.
Tomoji Tatsumi, ‘Nihon gun doku gasu iki dan mondai’, Kinyōbi 46 (6 December 1996): 16–17. 16.
Tsuneishi, ‘C. Koizumi: As a Promoter of the Ministry of Health and Welfare and an Originator of the BCW Research Program’. 101.
Tsuneishi, ‘Tokushū kenkyū kaigun no kagaku sen kenkyū kaihatsu shi’. 196.
Yasusaburō Sugi, ‘Seto Naikai No Doku Gasu Shima’, Bungei Shunjū 5 (May 1956): 238–51. 242.
Yoshiaki Yoshimi and Seiya Matsuno, Jūgo nen sensō gokuhi shiryō shū (Tokyo: Fuji shuppan, 1997). 14.
Yoshiaki Yoshimi, Doku gasu sen to nihon gun (Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 2004). 46.
Yoshimi and Matsuno, Jūgo nen sensō gokuhi shiryō shū. 391.
Yoshimi, Doku gasu sen to nihon gun. 149.
Yoshimi, Doku gasu sen to nihon gun. 41.
Yoshimi, Doku gasu sen to nihon gun. 45.
Yūji Okano, ed., Doku gasu tō: Ōkunoshima doku gasu kōjō sono higai to kagai (Hiroshima: Hiroshima heiwa kyōiku kenkyūjo, 1987). 11. Kikumatsu Inaba, ‘“Daitōa sensō” no tsumeato Ōkunoshima no jittai’, in Doku gasu no shima, Higuchi Kenji (Tokyo: Kobushi shobō, 2015), 188–99. 189.
Yukutake, Hitori hitori no Ōkunoshima: doku gasu kōjō kara no shōgen. 153.