老师布置噶一篇论文要将外文文献翻译成中文~~
边个好心人帮偶翻译下吖~~
无限感激~~
The debates over the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo and its role in Japanese politics and international relations became one of the defining features of the administration of Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro. After many years as a problematic but lowprofile
issue in Japan’s domestic and international affairs, PM Koizumi’s decision to make visits to the Shrine thrust the issue back onto the national and international agenda. The Yasukuni Shrine, and its accompanying museum, the Yushukan, have a profound symbolic significance for supporters and detractors. Yasukuni is a religious site that offers a place of semi-official mourning in a constitutionally secular country. It is a place to remember the war dead and the tragedy of conflict, as well as a site for revising the past and justifying – political and morally – Japan’s wars against Asia and the west. Opponents of Koizumi claimed his visits sanctioned a contentious and offensive revisionist historiography that seeks to deny Japanese aggression and reject the postwar consensus of Japanese war responsibility. Defenders of Yasukuni and the values portrayed in the attached Yushukan Museum claim that they are commemorating noble sacrifice and correcting the biased and illegitimate interpretation of the past imposed on Japan by the US and its allies after World War Two. Koizumi claimed his visits were made as a matter of the heart, and that his prayers separated those responsible for the war commemorated at Yasukuni from those who were the war’s victims. |