Reading Response: William M. Tsutsui
What’s shocking is how Japanese disaster film originated from its lean history and evokes people’s reflection on the embellishment of this topic (e.g., atomic bomb as a mushroom or other genres). On one hand, it draws the Japanese public to reflect on the destructions they have made and received during WW2 and serve as a complex psychological healing method that allays the horror in their mind. On the other hand, although in the 1960s the grandiose postwar reconstruction had once again put Japan on top of the world, some argue that it still nevertheless endures as an invisible scar in