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Relocating authority : Japanese Americans writing to redress mass incarceration  Cover Image E-book E-book

Relocating authority : Japanese Americans writing to redress mass incarceration

Shimabukuro, Mira. (Author).

Summary: "Relocating Authority examines the ways Japanese Americans have continually used writing to respond to the circumstances of their community's mass imprisonment during World War II. Using both Nikkei cultural frameworks and community-specific history for methodological inspiration and guidance, Mira Shimabukuro shows how writing was used privately and publicly to individually survive and collectively resist the conditions of incarceration. Examining a wide range of diverse texts and literacy practices such as diary entries, note-taking, manifestos, and multiple drafts of single documents, Relocating Authority draws upon community archives, visual histories, and Asian American history and theory to reveal the ways writing has served as a critical tool for incarcerees and their descendants. Incarcerees not only used writing to redress the 'internment' in the moment but also created pieces of text that enabled and inspired further redress long after the camps had closed. Relocating Authority highlights literacy's enduring potential to participate in social change and assist an imprisoned people in relocating authority away from their captors and back to their community and themselves. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of ethnic and Asian American rhetorics, American studies, and anyone interested in the relationship between literacy and social justice"--

Record details

  • ISBN: 1607324016
  • ISBN: 9781607324010
  • Physical Description: 1 online resource
    remote
  • Publisher: Boulder, Colorado : University Press of Colorado, 2015.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references.
Formatted Contents Note: Writing-to-Redress : Attending to Nikkei Literacies of Survivance -- ReCollecting Nikkei Dissidence : The Politics of Archival Recovery and Community Self-Knowledge -- ReCollected Tapestries : The Circumstances Behind Writing-to-Redress -- Me Inwardly Before I Dared : Attending Silent Literacies of Gaman -- Everyone put in a word : The Multisources of Collective Authority Behind Public Writing-to-Redress -- Another Earnest Petition : ReWriting Mothers of Minidoka -- Relocating Authority : Expanding the Significance of Writing-to-Redress -- Appendices.
Restrictions on Access Note:
NLC staff and students only.
Source of Description Note:
Print version record.
Subject: Japanese Americans -- Forced removal and internment, 1942-1945 -- Historiography
Japanese Americans -- Reparations -- History -- 20th century
Authority -- Social aspects -- United States -- History -- 20th century
Creative writing -- Social aspects -- United States -- History -- 20th century
Literacy -- Social aspects -- United States -- History -- 20th century
Japanese Americans -- Intellectual life -- 20th century
Japanese Americans -- Social conditions -- 20th century
Community life -- United States -- History -- 20th century
Social change -- United States -- History -- 20th century
Social justice -- United States -- History -- 20th century
Genre: History

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Showing Item 6 of 619
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