Statue

The Shifting Significance of Hirose Takeo’s Man-seibashi Statue 1910s-1930s
Von: 
Nicolas Stassar
“A portrait of Hirose Takeo.” Source: Tsuboya Zenshirō, Nichiro sen’eki kaigun shashin-shū, dai ni shū [The Navy’s Photographic Album of the Russo-Japanese War, Volume 2], p. 5. Acquired via the Kokuritsu kokkai toshokan dejitaru korekushon. Copyright on the work has expired.
This article concerns itself with the construction of Hirose Takeo (1868-1905) as Japan’s first “deified war hero” (gunshin) by shedding light on the construction and unveiling of his bronze statue at Manseibashi in 1910 and the construction of a Shintō shrine for his spirit (kami) in his hometown of Taketa in 1935. I will discuss the shifting significance that Hirose played within Japanese society as arguably one of the most iconic figures of the Russo-Japanese War (1904-5). Moreover, through the analysis of the efforts that went into commemorating Hirose, this article offers insights into the nature and content of gunshin itself. I argue that the literal meaning of gunshin does not accurately reflect the actual content of the phenomenon.
Aufsatz