Paradise in the sea of sorrow

our Minamata disease

English language

Published April 18, 2003 by Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan.

ISBN:
978-1-929280-25-4
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OCLC Number:
52853978

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In the early 1950s, numerous cases of organic mercury poisoning were discovered in the fishing villages around Minamata, Japan. Yet for decades after, victims of what is now known as Minamata disease suffered neglect, discrimination, and ostracism by Minamata residents, local government, labor unions, Minamata disease certification committees, and fishers’ cooperatives. Fifty years later, renewed efforts began to conserve the environment and reconcile with victims of poisoning, including a flurry of museum-building, citizen waste recycling campaigns, and conferences, symposia, and exhibitions. But this rapprochement in the 1990s took place slowly and with difficulty, as the pain of previous decades was still alive and aching.

Ishimure Michiko served as a key activist and spokesperson for the Minamata protest movement, producing over forty volumes of writings in various genres: docufiction, historical novels, reportage, autobiography, poetry, children’s books, and a Nō drama. Beyond playing an outsized role in organizing the Minamata struggle, Ishimure …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Methylmercury -- Toxicology -- Japan -- Minamata-shi
  • Marine pollution -- Health aspects -- Japan -- Yatsushiro Bay
  • Factory and trade waste -- Health aspects -- Japan -- Minamata-shi