Sadao asada biography of martin
For a detailed discussion, see Sadao Asada, "The Mushroom Cloud and....
The only Japanese sources Walker quotes are re- cent works by Sadao Asada and Daikichi Iro- kawa, written half a century after the war's end.This was forwarded to me, and I thought it might be of interest ot your readers:
Sadao Asada, Professor Emeritus of Doshisha University, died in Kyoto on February 4, 2019. He was 83 years old.
Professor Asada remains the finest historian of Japan’s Imperial navy, and one of his nation’s very best diplomatic historians. His corpus reveals an eye for the minutest detail, an unbridled enthusiasm for deep archival research, and an uncompromising set of scholarly standards.
Sadao Asada, who gives a much more plausible reconstruction of the Japanese decision to surrender in his Pacific Historical Review article of November
His legacy extends to that large number of students whom he trained and inspired.
Sadao Asada was born on January 29, 1936, in Japan’s ancient capital, Kyoto. He attended Doshisha’s relatively liberal schools. During his senior year at Doshisha High School, under the tutelage of Carelton College graduate Milton L.
Beirman, he nightly rewrote his class notes in English. Here, then, was an early indication of the stamina and determination which he applied to his studies.
Asada was awarded a Grew Found