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Nikkei In The Interior West Japanese Immigration And Community Building 18821945 1st Edition Eric Walz

  • SKU: BELL-51568848
Nikkei In The Interior West Japanese Immigration And Community Building 18821945 1st Edition Eric Walz
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Nikkei In The Interior West Japanese Immigration And Community Building 18821945 1st Edition Eric Walz instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Arizona Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 6.81 MB
Pages: 258
Author: Eric Walz
ISBN: 9780816534456, 0816534454
Language: English
Year: 2012
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Nikkei In The Interior West Japanese Immigration And Community Building 18821945 1st Edition Eric Walz by Eric Walz 9780816534456, 0816534454 instant download after payment.

Eric Walz's Nikkei in the Interior West tells the story of more than twelve thousand Japanese immigrants who settled in the interior West--Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Nebraska, and Utah. They came inland not as fugitives forced to relocate after Pearl Harbor but arrived decades before World War II as workers searching for a job or as picture brides looking to join husbands they had never met. Despite being isolated from their native country and the support of larger settlements on the West Coast, these immigrants formed ethnic associations, language schools, and religious institutions. They also experienced persecution and discrimination during World War II in dramatically different ways than the often-studied immigrants living along the Pacific Coast. Even though they struggled with discrimination, these interior communities grew both in size and in permanence to become an integral part of the American West. Using oral histories, journal entries, newspaper accounts, organization records, and local histories, Nikkei in the Interior West explores the conditions in Japan that led to emigration, the immigration process, the factors that drew immigrants to the interior, the cultural negotiation that led to ethnic development, and the effects of World War II. Examining not only the formation and impact of these Japanese communities but also their interaction with others in the region, Walz demonstrates how these communities connect with the broader Japanese diaspora.

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