Introduction: Siting Japan's Empire and Borders of Memory Edward Boyle (International Research Center for Japanese Studies [Nichibunken] , Japan) and Steven Ivings (Kyoto University, Japan) Part I - Struggles for Recognition 1. The 'time of the now': Upopoy and Ainu ancestral remains as sites of memory Michael Roellinghoff (University of Hong Kong, China) 2. Ichigaya Memorial and the (Non-)Representation of the Tokyo Trial Andre Hertich (Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria) 3. Contesting Memories Online: The Case of the 'Comfort Women' Page on English Wikipedia Jonathan Lewis (Hitotsubashi University, Japan) Part 2 - Cosmopolitan Connections 4. Enemies Buried Together: The Remains of War at Cowra Alison Starr (Independent Scholar, Australia) 5. Debating the Meaning and Removal of Kyoto's Mimizuka across the 20th Century Daniel Milne (Kyoto University, Japan) 6. Japanese Repatriation Museums and Bordering Memories of Empire Jonathan Bull (Hokkaido University, Japan) Part 3 - Stated or Unstated 7. Beyond a 'Site of Memory': The Puppet Emperor Palace Emily Matson (University of Virginia, USA) 8.
Meanings and Uses of Meiji Shrine Peter Zarrow (University of Connecticut, USA) 9. Humanizing Bordered Histories: Japanese Locals in Guam's War Memorial Maria Cynthia B. Barriga (Waseda University, Japan) Bibliography Index.