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That Damned Fence: The Literature of the Japanese American Prison Camps
That Damned Fence: The Literature of the Japanese American Prison Camps

That Damned Fence: The Literature of the Japanese American Prison Camps

著者: 
Heather Hathaway
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Until the late twentieth century, relatively few Americans knew that the United States government forcibly detained nearly 120,000 Japanese Americans during World War II. At war's end, the nation, including many of those who were confined to the ten Relocation Centers-which President Roosevelt initially referred to as "concentration camps"-wished to wipe this national tragedy from memory. That Damned Fence, titled after a poem written by a Japanese American held at the Minidoka camp in Idaho, draws on the creative work of the internees themselves to cast new light on this historical injustice. While in captivity, detainees produced moving poetry and fiction, compelling investigative journalism, and lasting work of arts to make sense of their hardships and to leave a record of their emotional and psychological suffering. Heather Hathaway explores the experiences of inmates in five camps-Topaz in Utah; Granada/Amache in Colorado; Rohwer and Jerome in Arkansas; and Tule Lake in northern California-each with their own literary magazines, such as TREK, All Aboard, Pulse, The Pen, Magnet, and The Tulean Dispatch. Conditions in the camps varied dramatically, as did their environments, ranging from sweltering swamplands and sun-blasted desert to frigid mountain terrain. So too did the inhabitants of each camp, with some dominated by farmers from California's Central Valley and others filled with professionals from the San Francisco Bay area. This disparity extended to the attitudes of camp administrators; some deemed the plan a mistake from the outset while others believed their captives to be a significant threat to national security. That Damned Fence reveals the anger and humor, and the deep despair and steadfast resilience with which Japanese Americans faced their wartime incarceration. By emphasizing the inner lives of the unjustly accused and the myriad ways in which they portrayed their captivity, Heather Hathaway gives voice to Americans imprisoned by their own country for their country of origin or appearance.

目次: 

Prefatory Poem: That Damned Fence, by Jim Yoshihara
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1: Topaz, A Literary Hotbed
Chapter 1. After the Bombs: The Experience of Toyo Suyemoto
Chapter 2. Writing as Resistance in Topaz: TREK and All Aboard
Chapter 3. Toshio Mori: A Literary Life Derailed
Chapter 4. Mine Okubo: An Aesthetic Life Launched
Part 2: Writing Elsewhere
Chapter 5. The Pulse of Amache/Granada
Chapter 6. Dispatches from Tumultuous Tule Lake
Chapter 7. Internment Novels: Toshio Mori's The Brothers Murata and Hiroshi Nakamura's Treadmill
Chapter 8. Jerome's Magnet
Chapter 9. Humiliation and Hope in Rohwer's The Pen
Endnotes
Further Reading
Works Cited

著者について: 

Heather Hathaway is Professor of English at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin and author of Caribbean Waves: Relocating Claude McKay and Paule Marshall.

商品情報

ISBN : 9780190098315

著者: 
Heather Hathaway
ページ
256 ページ
フォーマット
Hardcover
サイズ
156 x 235 mm
刊行日
2022年03月
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That Damned Fence: The Literature of the Japanese American Prison Camps

That Damned Fence: The Literature of the Japanese American Prison Camps

That Damned Fence: The Literature of the Japanese American Prison Camps