Google翻訳
"Postwar Youth Part I and II: Thinking about Postwar Japan (Signed)" is a photo collection by Kikujiro Fukushima, one of Japan's leading postwar photographers. While running a watch shop in his hometown of Yamaguchi Prefecture, Fukushima, as an amateur photographer, shot documentaries about atomic bomb survivors, capturing his fame with "Pikadon (1961)." After turning 40, he divorced and moved to Tokyo with his three children. While pursuing issues such as intensifying protests across the country, he began to question state and government oppression, and since then has focused his life's work on social issues such as student activism, politics, military affairs, pollution, and welfare. Despite being targeted by the public security police for his radical portrayals of "anti-establishment and anti-national" issues, he endured ambushes, wiretapping, and even house burnings, yet he remained true to his style as a true photojournalist. These books are the first and second in the "Postwar Youth" series, published by Sanichi Shobo in 1980 and 1981. Fukushima says he was deeply inspired by the energy of young people trying to build a new era with their own hands through the protests against the security treaty and student movements of the 1960s and 1970s. This documentary depicts the passionate passion of young people and the many mistakes the nation has made through the "University of Tokyo Struggle" and "Sarizuka Struggle."
(Part 1 only) Signed .