Pearl Harbor, 1941: A Bibliography
By (Author) Myron J. Smith
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
16th October 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
Bibliographies, catalogues
016.9405426
Hardback
224
1991 marks the 50th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbour, an event which plunged a basically self-absorbed United States directly into the the world's worst conflagration. For years, the United States, which had become a Pacific power almost simultaneously with Japan at the turn of the century, mistrusted Tokyo's intentions in the Far East. Off the international stage, most Americans either ignored Japan or failed to understand the dynamics of a millenium-old culture in the throes of modernization. The almost orderly manner in which U.S. Japanese relations fell terminally ill in 1941 continues to provide a textbook lesson for those who would work to avoid future catastrophies. In this book-length, annotated bibliography, Smith provides more than 1500 citations from 11 languages. Not only is the published literature examined, but care has been taken to cite the main repositories in the United States and abroad holding data necessary for the ongoing reinterpretation of the beginning of the War in the Pacific. The published literature cited covers virtually all factors surrounding the attack and its 1941 background: economic, political, diplomatic, racial, biographical, planning, intelligence, operations and hardware. Access is augmented by author and name indexes; the latter is keyed to specific personnel and vessels. While aimed primarily at students and scholars, this volume shoud also prove useful to teachers, journalists, policymakers, and all concerned with military studies and World War II.
MYRON J. SMITH, Jr., is director of the library and professor of library science and history at Tusculum College in Greeneville, Tennessee. He is the author or compiler of numerous works on modern military history.