This article interrogates, by teasing out the U.S. postwar suburb as a palimpsest bearing the imprint of post-internment milieu of the 1950s, how suburban fantasies reveal both promises and limitations of Japanese Americans’ surreptitious desire for national belonging in John Okada’s No-No Boy (1957). Subsequently, it examines how embedding the postwar suburb in the text is inextricably linked to textual negotiations with the expectations of the postwar readership as a strategy of articulation of a historical trauma.Having gone through the displacements and disruptions due to their Japanese origins and ties, returned internees were eager to put their families and lives back to their old places and faced the growing pressure to blend into th...
This article intends to investigate the narration of historical facts under newperspectives trough t...
This article addresses the little-known history of Japanese Latin American internment during WWII. C...
Some people say that ABE Kōbō’s works are devoid of nationality or national identity. However, a clo...
No-No Boy by John Okada is the first novel published by an Asian American author. Okada uses a ficti...
During World War II, the United States government interned over 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry....
One of the greatest injustices of the 20th century was the incarceration of Japanese Americans durin...
This paper explores the relationship between three fictional Asian American protagonists and their u...
This article considers Julie Otsuka’s representations of the World-War-II internment of Japanese Ame...
For Japanese incarcerated during World War II, returning “home” to Los Angeles was daunting. Often, ...
This paper explores the difficult relationship between Issei parents and Nisei children in John Okad...
As Cold War tensions escalated in the 1950s, the US began to promote cultural exchanges and propagan...
This thesis deals with the depiction of the consequences related to the internment of Japanese Ameri...
https://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/student_scholarship_posters/1028/thumbnail.jp
Abstract: The removal from the United States/Mexico borderlands of persons of Japanese descent durin...
Through close readings of An Artist of the Floating World and The Remains of the Day, supported by r...
This article intends to investigate the narration of historical facts under newperspectives trough t...
This article addresses the little-known history of Japanese Latin American internment during WWII. C...
Some people say that ABE Kōbō’s works are devoid of nationality or national identity. However, a clo...
No-No Boy by John Okada is the first novel published by an Asian American author. Okada uses a ficti...
During World War II, the United States government interned over 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry....
One of the greatest injustices of the 20th century was the incarceration of Japanese Americans durin...
This paper explores the relationship between three fictional Asian American protagonists and their u...
This article considers Julie Otsuka’s representations of the World-War-II internment of Japanese Ame...
For Japanese incarcerated during World War II, returning “home” to Los Angeles was daunting. Often, ...
This paper explores the difficult relationship between Issei parents and Nisei children in John Okad...
As Cold War tensions escalated in the 1950s, the US began to promote cultural exchanges and propagan...
This thesis deals with the depiction of the consequences related to the internment of Japanese Ameri...
https://scholarworks.moreheadstate.edu/student_scholarship_posters/1028/thumbnail.jp
Abstract: The removal from the United States/Mexico borderlands of persons of Japanese descent durin...
Through close readings of An Artist of the Floating World and The Remains of the Day, supported by r...
This article intends to investigate the narration of historical facts under newperspectives trough t...
This article addresses the little-known history of Japanese Latin American internment during WWII. C...
Some people say that ABE Kōbō’s works are devoid of nationality or national identity. However, a clo...