
Punishment
Behind Japanese Military Brutality A chilling exploration of how Imperial Japan framed war as justiceâand how that moral logic helped unleash extraordinary brutality across Asia and the Pacific. A chilling exploration of how Imperial Japan framed war as justiceâand how that moral logic helped unleash extraordinary brutality across Asia and the Pacific. Why was the Japanese Army so brutal before and during World War Two? This haunting question anchors a sweeping investigation into the moral universe of Imperial Japanâs soldiers, tracing their path from the twilight of the samurai age to the ashes of Manila in 1945. Punishment uncovers a world in which war was conceived not merely as combat, but also as justice. Officers and soldiers learned to navigate two rival visions of war: one restrained by the âforeign gazeâ of the Western world, the other rooted in older traditions that cast adversaries as ârebelsâ and âbanditsâ deserving exemplary punishment. However, these competing strategies were intertwined, in an interplay of mutual mitigation and brutalisation. Drawing on archival material in six languages and fieldwork conducted across Asiaâfrom Taiwanâs indigenous highlands to Manchuriaâs sorghum fields and the streets of NanjingâDanny Orbach reveals how ambiguity, obedience, fear and ideology converged on the battlefield. Vague orders could become massacres, and the boundary between necessity and cruelty became perilously thin. Part detective story, part moral history, Punishment illuminates how a modern state slid into devastating violenceâand why that descent was neither inevitable nor easily explained.
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$12.88Punishment
Behind Japanese Military Brutality A chilling exploration of how Imperial Japan framed war as justiceâand how that moral logic helped unleash extraordinary brutality across Asia and the Pacific. A chilling exploration of how Imperial Japan framed war as justiceâand how that moral logic helped unleash extraordinary brutality across Asia and the Pacific. Why was the Japanese Army so brutal before and during World War Two? This haunting question anchors a sweeping investigation into the moral universe of Imperial Japanâs soldiers, tracing their path from the twilight of the samurai age to the ashes of Manila in 1945. Punishment uncovers a world in which war was conceived not merely as combat, but also as justice. Officers and soldiers learned to navigate two rival visions of war: one restrained by the âforeign gazeâ of the Western world, the other rooted in older traditions that cast adversaries as ârebelsâ and âbanditsâ deserving exemplary punishment. However, these competing strategies were intertwined, in an interplay of mutual mitigation and brutalisation. Drawing on archival material in six languages and fieldwork conducted across Asiaâfrom Taiwanâs indigenous highlands to Manchuriaâs sorghum fields and the streets of NanjingâDanny Orbach reveals how ambiguity, obedience, fear and ideology converged on the battlefield. Vague orders could become massacres, and the boundary between necessity and cruelty became perilously thin. Part detective story, part moral history, Punishment illuminates how a modern state slid into devastating violenceâand why that descent was neither inevitable nor easily explained.
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Behind Japanese Military Brutality A chilling exploration of how Imperial Japan framed war as justiceâand how that moral logic helped unleash extraordinary brutality across Asia and the Pacific. A chilling exploration of how Imperial Japan framed war as justiceâand how that moral logic helped unleash extraordinary brutality across Asia and the Pacific. Why was the Japanese Army so brutal before and during World War Two? This haunting question anchors a sweeping investigation into the moral universe of Imperial Japanâs soldiers, tracing their path from the twilight of the samurai age to the ashes of Manila in 1945. Punishment uncovers a world in which war was conceived not merely as combat, but also as justice. Officers and soldiers learned to navigate two rival visions of war: one restrained by the âforeign gazeâ of the Western world, the other rooted in older traditions that cast adversaries as ârebelsâ and âbanditsâ deserving exemplary punishment. However, these competing strategies were intertwined, in an interplay of mutual mitigation and brutalisation. Drawing on archival material in six languages and fieldwork conducted across Asiaâfrom Taiwanâs indigenous highlands to Manchuriaâs sorghum fields and the streets of NanjingâDanny Orbach reveals how ambiguity, obedience, fear and ideology converged on the battlefield. Vague orders could become massacres, and the boundary between necessity and cruelty became perilously thin. Part detective story, part moral history, Punishment illuminates how a modern state slid into devastating violenceâand why that descent was neither inevitable nor easily explained.











