
Women enjoying a day at the beach. Their relaxed demeanor hardly suggests a time of war. Photos like this were used to project an image of modern Japan both domestically and abroad. Published in the German illustrated magazine "Stuttgarter Illustrierte Zeitung," October 16, 1940.
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"At first glance, it may look like a nostalgic snapshot, but given the magazine it appeared in and the historical context, it's far from heartwarming," says Mari Shirayama, who has long been involved in photo research and exhibition planning at the Japan Camera Industry Institute (JCII). The Second Sino-Japanese War began in 1937. As the conflict escalated, starting around 1938, photography was increasingly used as a wartime propaganda tool to boost public morale.
These images came to be known as kokusaku shashin, or "national policy photographs." The photo magazine Shashin Shuho was launched to support this effort.

Photography as Propaganda
Even seemingly casual snapshots were carefully staged and paired with headlines and articles designed to shape public opinion during wartime. Notable photographers such as Ihei Kimura and Ken Domon, who later became leading figures in Japanese photography, also took part in these activities as part of the government's total war mobilization.

After the war, the national policy photo archive was inherited by the Japan Travel Bureau (JTB). While most of the materials were later transferred to the National Archives of Japan, a collection of black-and-white film that remained at JTB was donated to JCII in 2018.

According to the foundation, research into the archive is still ongoing. Many of the negatives have been confirmed to date from the prewar period. Digitization is also in progress, with about 20,000 images already processed. The collection is extensive, and its full scope has yet to be revealed.

Ongoing Research and Digitization
"Preserving, studying, and exhibiting these valuable negatives is essential to passing them on to future generations," Shirayama emphasizes. National policy photographs may have fulfilled their original purpose during the war, but 80 years later, it is time to reconsider their significance — as a way to remember the war and pass on its lessons.

These wartime photos and other historical materials are currently featured in the exhibition "Japan Through the Former JTB Stock Photo Collection: Demonstration and Propaganda – National Policy Photography During the War, Part 1," on view until July 27 at the JCII Photo Salon in the JCII Camera Museum in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo.

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Author: Katsuyuki Seki, The Sankei Shimbun
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