The Camera as a Weapon

When the Japanese army marched into the Chinese capital Nanjing in December 1937, only a small number of foreign residents had stayed behind. One of them was John Gillespie Magee, an … Continue Reading →


Playing for Manchuria

It was the best of times, and it was the worst of times for Manchukuo’s national soccer team. In June 1940, while participating in a regional tournament in Osaka, it … Continue Reading →


Tank Cemetery: Armored Battle in Shanghai

In the early part of the three-month battle for Shanghai in 1937, China deployed its fledgling tank arm in an all-out attempt to wipe out the small and beleaguered Japanese … Continue Reading →


The Coca-Cola Ad

The photos on this page all have the same basic motif: Japanese soldiers engaged in battle in front of a giant Coca-Cola ad. They are from the same spot in … Continue Reading →


Red Russian Star over China

By January 1938, Russian pilot F. P. Polynin had only been in the central Chinese city of Hankou for a few weeks, and the Japanese invaders had still not gotten … Continue Reading →


A Bearded Army

When Japanese tank commander Fujita Sanehiko, pictured left, took part in the campaign in central China in late 1937, he was well-known back home. A gifted writer, he sent dispatches … Continue Reading →


‘All Quiet on the Western Front’

All Quiet on the Western Front as an 80-year-old Chinese comic book! That’s one of the most recent acquisitions made by the Rauner Special Collections Library, part of Dartmouth College … Continue Reading →


A Chinese in the German Wehrmacht

When the German Wehrmacht rolled into Austria in March 1938, one of its soldiers stood out. The 21-year-old sergeant-cadet in the 98th Jäger Regiment had jet-black hair, and his features … Continue Reading →


The Awful Fate of Prisoners

Part of the Sino-Japanese struggle in the late 1930s was aimed at global public opinion, and movies were among the weapons. This short documentary, shot shortly after the fall of … Continue Reading →


The First American Casualty of World War II

On August 14, 1937, Chinese planes dropped several bombs over the international parts of Shanghai, in a tragic error that cost the lives of hundreds. Among the victims was Robert … Continue Reading →