The phrase appears as an important theme in a range of books relating to major events in the history of the Japanese people.
Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston's Farewell to Manzanar devoted a chapter to the concept to explain why the Japanese Americans
interned in the US during
World War II did not put up more of a struggle against the restrictive conditions and policies put upon them. The historical
manga Barefoot Gen shows many of the citizens in
Hiroshima using the phrase "Shikata ga nai" to explain why they accept the military rule, and the acceptance of the below-poverty conditions that cause many of their citizens to starve. Similarly,
John Hersey's
Hiroshima applies the phrase after efforts to assist fatally injured
hibakusha ceased.
James Clavell used the phrase in his novel
Shōgun. The Japanese characters explain it to the westerner who comes to see its wisdom. The phrase is also introduced or explained by Japanese or Japanese-American characters in books such as
David Guterson's
Snow Falling on Cedars. In the book
The Hostile Beaches by
Gordon D. Shirreffs, the character Lieutenant Carney says the phrase. When asked what it means, he says it means "Let's get to work", not knowing its actual meaning. Later, Bob Dunbar says the words to confuse searching Japanese soldiers.
Kim Stanley Robinson also includes the phrase in his book
Red Mars. The phrase is spoken by Hiroko early on in the Mars colonization: "It was Hiroko who cut Arkady off, with what she said was a Japanese commonplace: 'Shikata ga nai,' meaning there is no choice" (100). Throughout the book, the phrase is a motif used when the characters have an unavoidable obligation or path. Pt 8, the final chapter of the book, is also called
Shikata ga nai. The phrase also appears in
James S. A. Corey's series
The Expanse as a phrase commonly used by Belters, multi-cultural residents of the asteroid belt. ==Other references==