From 1983 until 1990, Yasuko I. Takezawa pursued graduate study at the University of Washington and engaged in field work in Seattle\u27s Japanese American community. Breaking the Silence, a version of which was published in Japan in 1994, is the result of these years of research. Like Patricia Zavella\u27s Women\u27s Work and Chicano Families and Sylvia Yanagisako\u27s Transforming the Past, this is a book by an anthropologist that should capture the interest of social historians
Yukiko Kimura is a retired professor of sociology from the University of Hawaii who has also held a ...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
Joan Singler was one of the founders of the Seattle chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE...
From 1983 until 1990, Yasuko I. Takezawa pursued graduate study at the University of Washington and ...
Nisei, meaning American-born second-generation Japanese, is an epic scale undertaking of the recordi...
In 1987, the Smithsonian Institution, as part of its observance of the bicentennial of the Constitut...
Social Solidarity among the Japanese in Seattle is a rare and irreplaceable study of Japanese Americ...
This collection of previously unpublished essays grew out of a conference in Salt Lake City in 1983 ...
Oral history is unquestionably an important method for recovering the history of ethnic groups, part...
Transforming the Past is a major contribution to our understanding of Japanese American experience s...
Numerous historical studies discuss racism against Asian Americans as well as their resistance to ra...
Japanese language schools in California are chronicled from the early twentieth century until the ev...
For those interested in relations between Japan and the United States, this book is timely. It trace...
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
Analyzing the Nisei Week Festival in Los Angeles, Lon Kurashige provides an important account of thi...
Yukiko Kimura is a retired professor of sociology from the University of Hawaii who has also held a ...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
Joan Singler was one of the founders of the Seattle chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE...
From 1983 until 1990, Yasuko I. Takezawa pursued graduate study at the University of Washington and ...
Nisei, meaning American-born second-generation Japanese, is an epic scale undertaking of the recordi...
In 1987, the Smithsonian Institution, as part of its observance of the bicentennial of the Constitut...
Social Solidarity among the Japanese in Seattle is a rare and irreplaceable study of Japanese Americ...
This collection of previously unpublished essays grew out of a conference in Salt Lake City in 1983 ...
Oral history is unquestionably an important method for recovering the history of ethnic groups, part...
Transforming the Past is a major contribution to our understanding of Japanese American experience s...
Numerous historical studies discuss racism against Asian Americans as well as their resistance to ra...
Japanese language schools in California are chronicled from the early twentieth century until the ev...
For those interested in relations between Japan and the United States, this book is timely. It trace...
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
Analyzing the Nisei Week Festival in Los Angeles, Lon Kurashige provides an important account of thi...
Yukiko Kimura is a retired professor of sociology from the University of Hawaii who has also held a ...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
Joan Singler was one of the founders of the Seattle chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE...