Takashi Hirose (writer) explained

Takashi Hirose
Native Name:広瀬隆
Native Name Lang:ja
Birth Date:24 January 1943
Birth Place:Tokyo, Empire of Japan
Occupation:Writer
Nationality:Japanese
Alma Mater:Waseda University
Period:1965 –
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Relatives:Saburō Hirose (father)

is a Japanese writer. His father was Saburō Hirose, an architect.

Biography

He was born in Tokyo. After graduating from Waseda University, he started writing by translating foreign medical studies. After the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, Hirose wrote several works about the event in the 1980s. In his book,, he argues that several outdoor film sets in Nevada in the 1950s were contaminated as a result of nuclear testing.[1] After the Chernobyl disaster, Hirose published, in which he makes an argument about the risks of using nuclear energy to generate electricity.[2] [3]

In addition to writing works criticising nuclear power, Hirose wrote several works on the economy of Japan as well as the world economy. In 1986, he published, in which he focused on the Rockefeller and Morgan families. He also published a work focusing on the Rothschild family,, in 1991.[4] On Ryūichi Hirokawa's work concerning Judaism,, Hirose claimed that it revealed several Jewish conspiracies, particularly among Israel, South Africa and Taiwan.[5]

Concerning the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, Hirose suggested that Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano repeated the warnings given to him by Tokyo Electric Power Company about the health effects of the disaster.[6] He later wrote several works in which he called for a phase-out of nuclear power.[7] In 2012, a year since the accident, he gave a testimony for Beyond the Cloud, a film by Keiko Courdy concerning the event.[8]

Selected bibliography

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: ART : The Real Death Valley : Nobuho Nagasawa has created 'The Atomic Cowboy'--an exhibition that addresses the fatal consequences of using former atomic test sites as locations for '50s films. McKenna. Kristine. 1992-01-19. Los Angeles Times. 2018-12-18.
  2. Book: Tanaka, Akihiro. 1988. Look Japan. Look Japan. 19.
  3. Book: Manabe, Noriko. 2015. The Revolution Will Not be Televised: Protest Music After Fukushima. Oxford University Press. 88. 9780199334698.
  4. Book: Iida, Akira. 2012-02-14. Paradigm Theory & Policy Making: Reconfiguring the Future. Tuttle Publishing. 9781462904792.
  5. Book: Goodman. David G.. Miyazawa. Masanori. 2000. Jews in the Japanese Mind: The History and Uses of a Cultural Stereotype. Lexington Books. 218. 9780739101674.
  6. Book: Shuk-tine, Kinnie Yau. 2013-12-05. Natural Disaster and Reconstruction in Asian Economies: A Global Synthesis of Shared Experiences. Springer. 9781137364166.
  7. Web site: Farewell to Nuclear Power – A Lecture on Fukushima. Lummis. C. Douglas. 2011-09-11. The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus. 2018-12-18.
  8. Web site: Takashi Hirose: veteran Japanese anti-nuclear activist on the Fukushima disaster. 2016-03-11. DiaNuke.org. 2018-12-18.
  9. Book: Tabusa, Keiko. 1992. Nuclear politics: exploring the nexus between citizens' movements and public policy in Japan. UMI. 1989.
  10. Book: Hirose, Takashi. 1992. いつも月夜とは限らない. Japanese. Kodansha. 9784062057875.
  11. Book: Hirose, Takashi. 2007. 持丸長者国家狂乱篇: 日本を動かした怪物たち. Japanese. Diamond, Inc.. 9784478000816.
  12. Book: Hirose, Takashi. 2010. 二酸化炭素温暖化説の崩壊. Japanese. Shueisha. 9784087205527.
  13. Book: Hirose, Takashi. 2010. 原子炉時限爆弾: 大地震におびえる日本列島. Japanese. Diamond, Inc.. 9784478013595.