Mariana Poems: Visiting Rem(a)inders of War

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.25.1.2026.4268

Keywords:

Poetry, Mariana Islands, Guam, World War II, atomic bombs, tropical tourism, dark tourism, anti-aesthetic tourism, Pacific Islands

Abstract

The three poems, “Saipan,” “Tinian” and “Guam,” focus on the theme of anti-aesthetics and tropical tourism. Prior to World War II, the Northern Mariana Islands including Saipan and Tinian were occupied by Japan while the southernmost island in the chain, Guam, was controlled by the USA. There was fierce fighting between the two powers on these Pacific islands during the war. Significantly, the aircraft that dropped the atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshimi and Nagasaki, which ended the war, took off from Tinian. Promoted tourism today to the Marianas is primarily for the idealised tropical beach holiday, however, away from the coast, memorials to the horrors of the war on each of the islands can by visited by those willing to engage with often uneasy dark or anti-aesthetic tourism. 

Author Biography

Jane Nanette Downing, Independent Scholar/Artist, Australia

Jane Downing spent many years in the Pacific, living in Papua New Guinea, the Marshall Islands, and Guam as well as travelling to other island nations. Her poems have appeared at home in Australia and overseas including in Meanjin, Rabbit, Cordite, Canberra Times, Not Very Quiet, Social Alternatives, Live Encounters, e.ratio, Last Stanza, and Best Australian Poems. In 2025 she won the NSW Poetry Prize. Her collection, ‘When Figs Fly’ (Close-Up Books), was published in 2019.

References

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Published

2026-03-04

How to Cite

Downing, J. N. (2026). Mariana Poems: Visiting Rem(a)inders of War. ETropic: Electronic Journal of Studies in the Tropics, 25(1), 16–21. https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.25.1.2026.4268