Citizen 13660, first published in 1946, is part of the scant first-person record of Japanese American experience in the first half of the twentieth century. Like S. Frank Miyamoto\u27s Social Solidarity Among the Japanese in Seattle (1939, repr. 1984) and Toshio Mori\u27s Yokohama, California (1949, repr. 1986), Okubo\u27s book has been given new life by the University of Washington Press
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
Analyzing the Nisei Week Festival in Los Angeles, Lon Kurashige provides an important account of thi...
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...
Nisei, meaning American-born second-generation Japanese, is an epic scale undertaking of the recordi...
The reprinting of this book makes accessible to a new generation of readers the pioneering short fic...
This book\u27s primary subject is Kuniyoshi\u27s self-identity during WW II. Tagged an enemy alien f...
This historically important document is a translation of a humorous comic book published in 1931 bas...
When the sugar cane plantation owners in Hawaii realized how effective the immigrant Japanese worker...
Shikataganai! Shikataganai! It cannot be helped. The internment of Japanese Americans during World ...
This collection of previously unpublished essays grew out of a conference in Salt Lake City in 1983 ...
This article explores time in Miné Okubo’s graphic memoir Citizen 13660. Drawing on the work of Homi...
During World War II, the United States government interned over 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry....
Yukiko Kimura is a retired professor of sociology from the University of Hawaii who has also held a ...
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
Analyzing the Nisei Week Festival in Los Angeles, Lon Kurashige provides an important account of thi...
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...
Nisei, meaning American-born second-generation Japanese, is an epic scale undertaking of the recordi...
The reprinting of this book makes accessible to a new generation of readers the pioneering short fic...
This book\u27s primary subject is Kuniyoshi\u27s self-identity during WW II. Tagged an enemy alien f...
This historically important document is a translation of a humorous comic book published in 1931 bas...
When the sugar cane plantation owners in Hawaii realized how effective the immigrant Japanese worker...
Shikataganai! Shikataganai! It cannot be helped. The internment of Japanese Americans during World ...
This collection of previously unpublished essays grew out of a conference in Salt Lake City in 1983 ...
This article explores time in Miné Okubo’s graphic memoir Citizen 13660. Drawing on the work of Homi...
During World War II, the United States government interned over 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry....
Yukiko Kimura is a retired professor of sociology from the University of Hawaii who has also held a ...
In one of the blatant injustices in American history, 120,000 West Coast Japanese Americans were eva...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
Analyzing the Nisei Week Festival in Los Angeles, Lon Kurashige provides an important account of thi...