Yukiko Kimura is a retired professor of sociology from the University of Hawaii who has also held a number of research positions in Japan and the United States during her long career. Since retiring in Honolulu in 1968, she has been researching studies of the Japanese in Hawaii and has published several articles in this area. Issei: Japanese Immigrants in Hawaii is her first book
A result of the collaboration of several dozen specialists, this new reference work provides a wealt...
Studies of Japanese immigration into North America generally focus on the larger Hawaiian and West C...
Pau Hana is a refreshing change from the usual genre of ethnic materials expressing the dynamics of ...
Social Solidarity among the Japanese in Seattle is a rare and irreplaceable study of Japanese Americ...
Hyung-chan Kim\u27s bibliography of humanities and social science materials on Asian Americans has t...
When the sugar cane plantation owners in Hawaii realized how effective the immigrant Japanese worker...
In 1987, the Smithsonian Institution, as part of its observance of the bicentennial of the Constitut...
Eileen Tamura\u27s new book on the first American-born generation of Japanese immigrants to Hawaii i...
Nisei, meaning American-born second-generation Japanese, is an epic scale undertaking of the recordi...
Japanese language schools in California are chronicled from the early twentieth century until the ev...
This historically important document is a translation of a humorous comic book published in 1931 bas...
Oral history is unquestionably an important method for recovering the history of ethnic groups, part...
For those interested in relations between Japan and the United States, this book is timely. It trace...
From 1983 until 1990, Yasuko I. Takezawa pursued graduate study at the University of Washington and ...
Gracia Liu-Farrer’s Immigrant Japan: Mobility and Belonging in an Ethno-Nationalist Society is an in...
A result of the collaboration of several dozen specialists, this new reference work provides a wealt...
Studies of Japanese immigration into North America generally focus on the larger Hawaiian and West C...
Pau Hana is a refreshing change from the usual genre of ethnic materials expressing the dynamics of ...
Social Solidarity among the Japanese in Seattle is a rare and irreplaceable study of Japanese Americ...
Hyung-chan Kim\u27s bibliography of humanities and social science materials on Asian Americans has t...
When the sugar cane plantation owners in Hawaii realized how effective the immigrant Japanese worker...
In 1987, the Smithsonian Institution, as part of its observance of the bicentennial of the Constitut...
Eileen Tamura\u27s new book on the first American-born generation of Japanese immigrants to Hawaii i...
Nisei, meaning American-born second-generation Japanese, is an epic scale undertaking of the recordi...
Japanese language schools in California are chronicled from the early twentieth century until the ev...
This historically important document is a translation of a humorous comic book published in 1931 bas...
Oral history is unquestionably an important method for recovering the history of ethnic groups, part...
For those interested in relations between Japan and the United States, this book is timely. It trace...
From 1983 until 1990, Yasuko I. Takezawa pursued graduate study at the University of Washington and ...
Gracia Liu-Farrer’s Immigrant Japan: Mobility and Belonging in an Ethno-Nationalist Society is an in...
A result of the collaboration of several dozen specialists, this new reference work provides a wealt...
Studies of Japanese immigration into North America generally focus on the larger Hawaiian and West C...
Pau Hana is a refreshing change from the usual genre of ethnic materials expressing the dynamics of ...