"'They're Bringing Home Japanese Wives': Japanese War Brides in the Postwar Era" explores the immigration of Japanese war brides to the U.S. following World War II and why the United States so swiftly and dramatically reversed its views toward immigration from Japan following the war; the degree to which Americans, both those of Japanese descent and those of other heritages, accepted this influx of newcomers; and the lived experiences of these immigrant women during their first decade in America. Drawing on sources that range from government documents to interviews with war brides conducted in the 1950s, I argue that postwar constructions of racialized gender eased the acceptance of these women into American society. However, sometimes th...
This study is concerned with the influence of a host culture on individuals separated from their hom...
This dissertation examines 50,000 American migrants of Japanese ancestry (Nisei) who traversed acros...
During and after World War II, over one hundred thousand American servicemen married women they met ...
My dissertation, “From Picture Brides to War Brides: Race, Gender, and Belonging in the Making of Ja...
As a result of the Immigration Act of 1924, Asian immigration into the US halted. Anti-immigration, ...
This study focused on the cultural transition and adjustment of Japanese women, commonly known as wa...
Little is known about the experiences of Japanese war brides who met their New Zealand husbands-to-b...
Between 1942 and 1945, over two million servicemen occupied the southern Pacific theatre, the majori...
This project analyzes how "Japanese war brides" who married American GIs as a result of the U.S. occ...
One of the last new colonial projects in the twentieth century began on September 2, 1945. The Ameri...
Many historical studies of Asian immigration in the United States focus on the Immigration and Natio...
This qualitative study analyzes the acculturation and assimilation of Japanese war brides into Appal...
Becoming “Hawaiian”: World War II War Heroes and the Rise of Japanese American Power, 1941-1963 exam...
Thesis (M.A., History (Public History)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2011.Roughly one...
Funded in part by a grant from the Kansas Committee for the Humanities, an affiliate of the National...
This study is concerned with the influence of a host culture on individuals separated from their hom...
This dissertation examines 50,000 American migrants of Japanese ancestry (Nisei) who traversed acros...
During and after World War II, over one hundred thousand American servicemen married women they met ...
My dissertation, “From Picture Brides to War Brides: Race, Gender, and Belonging in the Making of Ja...
As a result of the Immigration Act of 1924, Asian immigration into the US halted. Anti-immigration, ...
This study focused on the cultural transition and adjustment of Japanese women, commonly known as wa...
Little is known about the experiences of Japanese war brides who met their New Zealand husbands-to-b...
Between 1942 and 1945, over two million servicemen occupied the southern Pacific theatre, the majori...
This project analyzes how "Japanese war brides" who married American GIs as a result of the U.S. occ...
One of the last new colonial projects in the twentieth century began on September 2, 1945. The Ameri...
Many historical studies of Asian immigration in the United States focus on the Immigration and Natio...
This qualitative study analyzes the acculturation and assimilation of Japanese war brides into Appal...
Becoming “Hawaiian”: World War II War Heroes and the Rise of Japanese American Power, 1941-1963 exam...
Thesis (M.A., History (Public History)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2011.Roughly one...
Funded in part by a grant from the Kansas Committee for the Humanities, an affiliate of the National...
This study is concerned with the influence of a host culture on individuals separated from their hom...
This dissertation examines 50,000 American migrants of Japanese ancestry (Nisei) who traversed acros...
During and after World War II, over one hundred thousand American servicemen married women they met ...