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Episode Notes
M. G. Sheftall has lived in Japan since 1987. He has a PhD in international relations and modern Japanese history from Waseda University in Tokyo. Since 2001, he has been a professor of modern Japanese cultural history and communication at the Faculty of Informatics of Shizuoka University. He lives in Hamamatsu, Japan.
Amy Chavez talks to Sheftall about his books on the Asia Pacific War, in particular Hiroshima: The Last Witnesses (Dutton, 2025) and Nagasaki: The Last Witnesses (Dutton, 2025) both oral histories featuring interviews with survivors of the atomic bombs.

Has Japan’s 80 years of peace education been all for naught? The book serves as a prescient warning given the current political climate and Japan’s complex relationships with the US, Taiwan, China, and the broader world. Recent developments—including Nihon Hidankyo’s 2024 Nobel Peace Prize and the ongoing protests against revising Article 9—bring this subject into sharp focus. Against this backdrop, the author offers his own perspective on Japan’s nuclear future.
