Until recently, the majority of the research dealing with the relocation and internment of Japanese Americans, or Nikkei as they are known among themselves, during World War II has been focused largely on the structural aspects of that experience. That is, how did the government of the United States come to the conclusion it was necessary, indeed imperative, to imprison over 120,000 men, women and children, of whom 70,000 were American citizens, singled out solely by the criteria of racial heritage. Those studies which have dealt with the internees themselves have tended to be either very broad, somewhat antiseptic accounts, or personal stories concentrating on the experiences of only a few individuals. What has heretofore been lacking is a...
In the early 1800s, when Lewis and Clark visited the Hidatsas, they lived at the mouth of the Knife ...
While prior scholarship on Japanese American Internment during World War II has been prolific, few h...
Any student of the relations between Native Americans and the US government and anyone who has read ...
Until recently, the majority of the research dealing with the relocation and internment of Japanese ...
In the spring of 1942, under the guise of "military necessity," the U.S. government evacuated 110,00...
This collection of previously unpublished essays grew out of a conference in Salt Lake City in 1983 ...
Shikataganai! Shikataganai! It cannot be helped. The internment of Japanese Americans during World ...
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
Nisei, meaning American-born second-generation Japanese, is an epic scale undertaking of the recordi...
While American history is replete with outrageous and tragic examples of racism, two of the most pro...
In 1987, the Smithsonian Institution, as part of its observance of the bicentennial of the Constitut...
The American public voices its concerns over fundamental issues, like the justice system, that perta...
From 1983 until 1990, Yasuko I. Takezawa pursued graduate study at the University of Washington and ...
Japanese American internment in the United States during World War II affected thousands of lives fo...
Social Solidarity among the Japanese in Seattle is a rare and irreplaceable study of Japanese Americ...
In the early 1800s, when Lewis and Clark visited the Hidatsas, they lived at the mouth of the Knife ...
While prior scholarship on Japanese American Internment during World War II has been prolific, few h...
Any student of the relations between Native Americans and the US government and anyone who has read ...
Until recently, the majority of the research dealing with the relocation and internment of Japanese ...
In the spring of 1942, under the guise of "military necessity," the U.S. government evacuated 110,00...
This collection of previously unpublished essays grew out of a conference in Salt Lake City in 1983 ...
Shikataganai! Shikataganai! It cannot be helped. The internment of Japanese Americans during World ...
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
Nisei, meaning American-born second-generation Japanese, is an epic scale undertaking of the recordi...
While American history is replete with outrageous and tragic examples of racism, two of the most pro...
In 1987, the Smithsonian Institution, as part of its observance of the bicentennial of the Constitut...
The American public voices its concerns over fundamental issues, like the justice system, that perta...
From 1983 until 1990, Yasuko I. Takezawa pursued graduate study at the University of Washington and ...
Japanese American internment in the United States during World War II affected thousands of lives fo...
Social Solidarity among the Japanese in Seattle is a rare and irreplaceable study of Japanese Americ...
In the early 1800s, when Lewis and Clark visited the Hidatsas, they lived at the mouth of the Knife ...
While prior scholarship on Japanese American Internment during World War II has been prolific, few h...
Any student of the relations between Native Americans and the US government and anyone who has read ...