@article{oai:edo.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000118, author = {清水, 一彦 and Shimizu, Kazuhiko}, month = {2014-06-12}, note = {The words, "mohaya ‘sengo’ dewanai (it is no longer 'postwar'),” which immediately became the popular phrase of the moment, are found in the 1956 Economic White Paper. It was a forewarning of the challenges that will emerge following the end of the economic growth spurred by postwar recovery efforts, but within the "kuuki” (air) of sentiments that it's about time for the postwar period to end, a different interpretation of these words soon became mainstream. Interaction between the media and receivers since that time served in the selection/construction process of shaping collective memory, and this social memory was continuously reconstructed to become an even more comfortable narrative for the receivers to accept. Today, in 2013, it has changed to the point where it is recollected that the economic white paper had indicated Japan's entry into a period of high economic growth following the Jinmu boom (economic boom of the mid 1950s), by loudly proclaiming "it is no longer postwar.” In this present study, the author analyzes the process of change in social memory of this phrase.}, title = {Selection and Construction in the Process of Shaping Social Memory of the Phras, "It Is No Longer 'Postwar'”}, year = {}, yomi = {シミズ, カズヒコ} }