Preparing a Perfect Place To Die: One Soldier's Engagement with the Requirement for Death under the kokutai
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 16:35authored byVictoria Eaves-Young
For Japanese soldiers in the Pacific War, yielding to the call to soldiering meant adhering to the principles of the kokutai. Underlying this all-encompassing ideology was a requirement to accept death as the ultimate act of loyalty to the emperor. Since the Meiji Restoration, the citizens of Japan had been told that death in war was a noble and glorious deed, and that sacrificing one’s life for the emperor, a living god no less, was to achieve true purification, for the soldier involved and for his own and his family’s wider reputation. Under the kokutai the rewards for a glorified death were death’s recognition as an ultimate sign of honour, masculinity and virility, and on a spiritual level, death in war promised eternal deification to those who died in accordance with the teachings of the kokutai.
History
Publication title
Journal of the Oriental Society of Australia
Volume
44
Issue
Special Issue
Pagination
65-96
ISSN
0030-5340
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
The Oriental Society of Australia
Place of publication
Sydney
Rights statement
Copyright 2012 The Oriental Society of Australia
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in language, communication and culture