Japanese American History: An A-to-Z Reference from 1868 to the PresentBrian Niiya, Japanese American National Museum (Los Angeles, Calif.) VNR AG, 1993 - 386 pàgines On June 19, 1868 a ship sailed into Honolulu harbor carrying 148 Japanese men, women and children. Contract laborers brought in to work American-owned Hawaiian sugar plantations, these were the first of over 300,000 immigrants from Japan who settled mostly in Hawaii and California between 1868 and 1924. Their American descendants today number over 750,000 and live in every state. Japanese Americans have played an important and largely unrecognized role in American history. Japanese American History is the first encyclopedic reference work documenting their story. The lack of an accurate historical interpretation of their experience has resulted in depictions of Japanese Americans that range from the blatantly racist ("yellow peril") to the patronizing ("model minority"). Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, other Americans became unwilling to distinguish them from the enemy, and as a result more than 120,000 Japanese Americans were forcibly removed from their homes to concentration camps - a mass internment that lasted three years. Only in the last 20 years has a more complete story begun to emerge. A new generation of scholars has focused on the experience of the Japanese Americans themselves. Using Japanese-language sources, oral histories and other previously neglected material, these scholars have illuminated the world of issei labor leaders, nisei soldiers, nikkei women writers and many others. Achievements and contributions by individuals in virtually every field are noted here. Japanese American History brings this material together for the first time, in an accessible and comprehensive reference format. There are four sections: a chronology of major events in JapaneseAmerican history in historical context; more than 400 A-to-Z entries on significant individuals, organizations, events and movements; a thorough bibliography including all major works on Japanese Americans; and an illuminating historical overview by Professor Gary Okihiro, a distinguished scholar of Japanese American history. More than 100 photos and drawings are also included, most never published before. Japanese American History has been produced with the guidance of leading scholars under the auspices of the Japanese American National Museum, the major repository of documentary material on Japanese American history. Opened in Los Angeles in the spring of 1992, its growing collections include artifacts, a still and motion picture archive, and an extensive library of books and papers. |
Continguts
Introduction to the Chronology | 24 |
Introduction ix | |
Introduction to the Chronology 24 | 24 |
Complete Citations for Chronology | 88 |
364 | |
Frases i termes més freqüents
activities aliens Angeles anti-Japanese army arrived Asian Asian American Association attended August became become began begins bill born California called Center citizens citizenship City Committee Company concentration camps Court December early Ethnic eventually farm February forced formed further reading Hawaii History Honolulu House Ichioka included Internment Island issei issue JACL January Japan Japanese American Japanese American community Japanese immigrants John July June labor Lake land later leaders League Little living Los Angeles mainland major March military moved movement nisei November October opened organized Pacific person plantation played President Press Rafu Shimpo received Redress Relocation removal result returned San Francisco Seattle Senator September served Story strike Studies term tion Tokyo Tule Lake Union United University Washington West Coast women workers World York
Referències a aquest llibre
Asian American Youth: Culture, Identity, and Ethnicity Jennifer Lee,Min Zhou Previsualització limitada - 2004 |
Storied Lives: Japanese American Students and World War II Gary Y. Okihiro Previsualització limitada - 2011 |