New Books in Japanese Studies

Jie-Hyun Lim, "Victimhood Nationalism: History and Memory in a Global Age" (Columbia UP, 2025)

Feb 21, 2026
Jie-Hyun Lim, distinguished historian of memory studies and director at Sogang University, explores how nations fashion themselves as victims. He traces victimhood nationalism across Korea, Japan, Poland, Germany, and Israel. Topics include memorial sacralization, Holocaust memory as a global reference, appropriation of suffering, and the politics and limits of forgiveness.
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INSIGHT

Victims Become National Martyrs

  • Victimhood often shifts into a narrative of sacrifice that legitimizes nationalism.
  • Jie-Hyun Lim calls this transformation a sublimation from passive victims to active martyrs.
ANECDOTE

Yasukuni As a Memory Stage

  • Yasukuni Shrine functions as a memory site that turns innocent dead into sublime sacrifices for the nation or emperor.
  • Lim notes similar memorial language appears across East Asia, not just Japan.
INSIGHT

Holocaust As A Persuasive Reference

  • Holocaust memory became globally central because activists invoked it to persuade unfamiliar Western audiences.
  • Lim shows groups like Korean comfort-women activists strategically link their causes to Holocaust memory.
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