By administrative order, dramas about resisting the Japanese wartime enemy will fill Chinese TV channels this week as China celebrates — including with a massive military parade — the victory over Japan 70 years ago.
Combined with pervasive patriotic education that goes to great lengths in detailing Japanese atrocities, the order on programming from Tuesday to Saturday ensures that the Chinese public — generation after generation — always remembers the country’s past humiliation as well as the bitter but valiant efforts to resist the Japanese.
“We are reminded of the war against Japan so constantly that I have developed an inherent antipathy toward Japan,” said Cong Yuting, a 26-year-old teacher from Dalian.
Anti-Japanese sentiments in China are never far from the surface and have broken out in the open when tensions between Beijing and Tokyo fly high, even as Chinese visit Japan in droves, buy Japanese products and embrace Japanese anime and fashion.
Why so much anger, after so much time? It is complicated.
Japan’s apologies — perceived to be less than wholehearted — and its leaders’ ambiguous stances are often blamed. Recent moves by Japanese leaders to change the country’s constitution to allow Japan’s military a greater role have added to China’s perception of Japan as militaristic and unrepentant.
However, Beijing’s propaganda machine has also been a factor, overshadowing in many Chinese minds the fact that for more than a half-century after the war, Japan has been one of the world’s more pacifist countries, not to mention generous to China with aid, especially infrastructure loans.
“Constant brainwashing since day one in the education and mass media systems has played a key role in building and keeping alive these strong anti-Japanese sentiments,” said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, professor of government and international studies at Hong Kong Baptist University. “Larger segments of the Chinese society seem to really believe that the Japanese are still very militarist and nationalistic.”
Patriotic education is mandated in Chinese schools, and students often go on field trips to sites highlighting atrocities of the Japanese invaders. The propaganda is intended to strengthen one-party rule, enlist solidarity against a common external boogeyman and distract the public from thorny domestic issues, Cabestan said.
“The party unites the Chinese society under its banner and uses nationalism and anti-Japanese sentiments as glue around it and a diversion from other problems,” he said. “The deepening economic difficulties have contributed and will contribute to intensifying the magnitude and decibels of the current anti-Japanese propaganda.”
The focus by the Chinese Communist Party leadership on the resistance against the Japanese generally glosses over the fact that for much of the 20th century, the Communists were fighting the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) under Chiang Kai-shek (蔣介石), and that Chiang was the Chinese leader recognized by the Allies fighting the Japanese as the military commander in China during World War II.
The Chinese government has ordered a flood of TV programs, films, variety shows, books and special events commemorating the 70th anniversary of the war victory against Japan — usually playing up the role of Communist troops — while banning broadcasters from airing entertainment programs in the first five days of next month.
The culmination of events comes on Thursday with a military parade through the heart of Beijing. China marks Sept. 3 — the day after Japan formally surrendered to the Allies in the Pacific aboard a US naval ship in 1945 — as the day of victory over the Japanese.
For many years already, China’s television screens have been filled with anti-Japanese dramas, which not only receive government funding but also are exempt from quotas on the numbers of programs per genre, and are more likely to pass state censors. They also have a ready and loyal audience, making this genre popular with TV producers looking for safe investments.
Gearing up for this fall’s mandated war theme, most crews in the film city of Hengdian were filming war dramas featuring the resistance against the Japanese. State media have reported that more than 50 war dramas are planned for this year.
Beijing also has ordered movie theaters throughout China to heavily promote war films in the first 10 days of next month, and has ordered that 100 books and 20 audio products with war themes be published during the month.
In 2012, when China-Japan tensions over a chain of contested islands in East China Sea boiled over, Beijing allowed anti-Japanese protests throughout China, which briefly included demonstrators hurling rocks at the Japanese embassy in Beijing. State media helped fan the anti-Japanese sentiments.
In daily conversations and in pop culture, the Chinese are used to dismissing Japanese as “devils” and calling the country — condescendingly — “Little Japan.”
Some Chinese academics insist that it is Japan’s failure to adequately apologize for its brutal colonization of much of China starting in 1930s and its wartime brutality that is the core reason for continued anti-Japanese sentiments.
“As an aggressor, Japan has not apologized, so how can you expect China, as the victim, to be tolerant and forgiving?” said Huang Dahui (黃大慧), director of the East Asia Studies Center at Beijing’s Renmin University and a Japan specialist. “How can the victim have closure when the perpetuator has not expressed genuine remorse?”
Huang said the Chinese are not inherently anti-Japanese, and that their nationalism is only triggered when China is provoked.
“It’s only a response,” he said.
Cong now lives in Japan after having followed her husband to Tokyo on a job assignment, and now gives Chinese-language lessons. She has started to see Japanese people as disinterested in politics.
Asked if China has gone overboard in constantly propagating war history, Cong paused and said: “It’s hard to say. I don’t think it’s a bad thing. If we don’t do it, those born in the 1990s, 2000s or even those in 2010s won’t know this part of history.”
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