Maika Nakao, Masaya Nemoto, and Ran Zwigenberg: Introduction: Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the Eightieth Anniversary of the Bombing Part I: Reconstruction of Memory/Memory of Reconstruction 1. Yuko Kawaguchi: "Immigrants' Ties to Their Homeland: Hiroshiman Traders and Japanese-American Communities in the Early Postwar Years" 2. Marina Nishii: "Masculinity and Gender in Reconstruction of Hiroshima" 3. Hirokazu Miyazaki: "A Tale of Two Churches:Catholic Atomic Ruins, Fundraising, and Trans-Pacific Relationality" 4. Hibiki Yamaguchi: " Shogen as Witnessing and Fukugen as Reclaiming: Breaking the "Silence" of Nagasaki"" Part II: Hibakusha beyond Hiroshima and Nagasaki 5. Kyoko Sato: "Surviving the A-Bomb in Japanese America: Politics, Expertise, and Nuclear Visions" 6. Naoko Wake: "The Bomb's Slow Violence: The Rise of Diasporic Memories and Transnational Activism" 7. Kyoko Matsunaga: "Trans/National Nuclear Colonialisms: Revisiting Village of Widows " 8.
Yuki Miyamoto: "The Metaphor of Blood and Discrimination Against Hibakusha: A Hermeneutical Lacuna in Japan's Social Order" Part III: Material and Immaterial Inheritance 9. Chad Diehl: "Visualizing Nagasaki: Art, Ekphrasis, and Postmemory" 10.Ran Zwigenberg: " Ihin : The Sanctification of A-Bomb Objects in the Hiroshima Museum" 11.Maika Nakao: "Body for Eulogy and Investigation: Science, Religion, and Atomic Bomb Victims in Postwar Nagasaki" 12.Robert Jacobs: "Atomic Memeification: "Hiroshima" as a Unit of Measure"13.Masaya Nemoto: "From a Means to an End: The History of Inheriting the A-Bomb Experience in Hiroshima" Maika Nakao, Masaya Nemoto, and Ran Zwigenberg: Epilogue.