Structure / Mobility (II)
While its design features certainly encourage a uniform reading, the site possesses the flexibility sufficient to permit alternate readings, allowing for the expresion of dissent. Specifically, the materials gathered under "Contributions from the Readers" represent an example of how a contrasting viewpoint may be aired. The accounts contained here differ in their orientation (positive, negative), but many of them offer competing versions of the Hiroshima story (e.g., from American GI's, Koreans), illustrating the range of its effects on other peoples.
Although they appear near the end of the table of contents (presumably a low rank in the hierarchy?), these documents provide the closing gesture, leaving the impression of an open-ended site. In addition, the links provided in "Related Work" continue this project, granting access to Japanese atrocites and other information similarly overlooked.
Again, this material appears to be "hidden" within the overall framework (from a mobility standpoint), but its inclusion at least indicates a willingness to raise new questions.