Published inThe Nanjing MassacreWorks Cited: The Nanjing MassacreBibliography of the online project the Nanjing Massacre at https://medium.com/the-nanjing-massacreJan 5, 2021Jan 5, 2021
Published inThe Nanjing MassacreReference: The New York Times article published on January 9, 1938The New York Times reporter Tillman Durdin wrote a detailed account of what he saw in Nanjing.Aug 16, 2020Aug 16, 2020
Published inThe Nanjing MassacreReference: Letters and Diaries from NankingA small number of Western businessmen and missionaries remained in Nanjing after the Japanese troops took over the city in 1937.Aug 16, 2020Aug 16, 2020
Published inThe Nanjing MassacreReference: The Tokyo Trial JudgmentThe judgment of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East on the Nanjing Massacre.Aug 16, 2020Aug 16, 2020
Published inThe Nanjing MassacreReference: The New York Times article published on December 18, 1937The New York Times reporter Tillman Durdin witnessed the fall of Nanjing and dispatched this report from Shanghai.Aug 14, 2020Aug 14, 2020
Published inThe Nanjing MassacreControversy in Japan in the 1990sThe biggest political shift in Japan after the WWII in 1993 prompted a series of politicized debates over the country’s wartime aggression.Aug 14, 2020Aug 14, 2020
Published inThe Nanjing MassacreDeath toll II: Modern EstimatesThe focal point of the recent controversy over the Nanjing Massacre has always been the final death toll.Aug 14, 2020Aug 14, 2020
Published inThe Nanjing MassacreDeath toll I: Early estimatesThe death toll in Nanjing has been tinged with politically symbolic meaning and has maintained the emotional controversy for decades.Aug 13, 2020Aug 13, 2020
Published inThe Nanjing MassacrePostwar Judgment II: Nanking War Crime TribunalSome 5,700 Japanese were tried for Class B and C war crimes by the Allied nations in Yokohama, Singapore, Nanjing, and other cities.Aug 10, 2020Aug 10, 2020
Published inThe Nanjing MassacrePostwar Judgment I : International Military Tribunal for the Far EastThe Tokyo War Crimes Trial convened on April 29, 1946. Charges included “crimes against humanity,” which included the Nanjing Massacre.Aug 10, 2020Aug 10, 2020