著者
水野 剛也
出版者
東洋大学
雑誌
基盤研究(C)
巻号頁・発行日
2011

十分な研究成果をあげることができ、大変に満足している。当初4年間の計画だったものを3年間で打ち切切り、あらたな研究計画によって科研費に申請(採択、基盤研究C、課題番号 26370871、研究課題 「第2次大戦時ハワイ日系人新聞の検閲 アメリカ軍による戒厳令下の「敵国語」統制、2014年-2019年」)したのは、そのためである。期間を通じた主要な研究成果として、雑誌論文5本(すべて査読性、日英両言語)、学会発表6回(日米学会)、図書2冊(単著1冊)をうみだすことができた。
著者
水野 剛也
出版者
日本マス・コミュニケーション学会
雑誌
マス・コミュニケーション研究 (ISSN:13411306)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.65, pp.116-132, 2004

During World War II, the U.S. government uprooted more than 110,000Japanese Americans from the West Coast and put them into inland camps. Thisincident has been examined from various aspects by a number of scholars. Butvery little has been written about how the federal government treated thepress of Japanese Americans. This study analyzes how the Office of Facts andFigures (OFF) and Office of War Information (OWI) made use of the Japanese"enemy language" newspapers for information dissemination during the earliestphase of war. It also investigates how these agencies elicited voluntary cooperation,which was de facto self-censorship, from Japanese newspapers.
著者
水野 剛也
出版者
日本マス・コミュニケーション学会
雑誌
マス・コミュニケーション研究 (ISSN:13411306)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.65, pp.116-132, 2004-07-31 (Released:2017-10-06)
参考文献数
34

During World War II, the U.S. government uprooted more than 110,000 Japanese Americans from the West Coast and put them into inland camps. This incident has been examined from various aspects by a number of scholars. But very little has been written about how the federal government treated the press of Japanese Americans. This study analyzes how the Office of Facts and Figures (OFF) and Office of War Information (OWI) made use of the Japanese “enemy language” newspapers for information dissemination during the earliest phase of war. It also investigates how these agencies elicited voluntary cooperation, which was de facto self-censorship, from Japanese newspapers.
著者
水野 剛也
出版者
東洋大学社会学部
雑誌
東洋大学社会学部紀要 = The Bulletin of Faculty of Sociology,Toyo University (ISSN:04959892)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.55, no.2, pp.5-16, 2018-03

This research attempts to analyze qualitatively (and partly quantitatively) how comic strips of the three major national newspapers in Japan, Mainichi, Yomiuri, and Asahi, both in morning and in evening editions, portrayed Prime Minister Naoto Kan during his tenure, from June 8, 2010 to September 2, 2011. As the last installment of a five-part series, this article sums up the findings of the entire series and presents conclusions.