This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
University of Washington Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
The Concentration Camps and Japanese Economic Losses in California Agriculture, 1900-1942
-
and
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface to the Original Edition vii
- Preface to the Revised Edition viii
- A Note on the Editors and Authors ix
- Chronology of Japanese American History xv
-
PART I Relocation, Redress, and the Report
- The Conference Keynote Address: Relocation, Redress, and the Report A Historical Appraisal 1
-
PART II Prewar Japanese America
- Introduction 11
- The Uprooting of My Two Communities 15
- The Uprooting of Seattle 18
-
PART III Life in the Camps
- Introduction 21
- Camp Memories: Rough and Broken Shards 27
- An Issei Internee's Experiences 31
- My Two Years at Heart Mountain: The Difficult Role of an Applied Anthropologist 33
- A Teacher at Topaz 38
- The Impact of Incarceration on the Education of Nisei Schoolchildren 44
- American Mistreatment of Internees During World War II: Enemy Alien Japanese 52
- The Santa Fe Internment Camp and the Justice Department Program for Enemy Aliens 57
- The Forced Migrations of West Coast Japanese Americans, 1942-1946: A Quantitative Note 72
-
PART IV Reactions to the Camps
- Introduction 75
- Racial Nativism and Origins of Japanese American Relocation 79
- Congressional Opinion and War Relocation, 1943 88
- Utah's Ambiguous Reception: The Relocated Japanese Americans 92
- Forty Years Later: Delta High School Students Look at Topaz 99
- Japanese Americans in Idaho 103
- Western Reaction to the Relocated Japanese Americans: The Case of Wyoming 112
- Seattle's Peace Churches and Relocation 117
- "Fellow ... Feelers with the Afflicted": The Christian Churches and the Relocation of the Japanese Ouring World War II 123
-
PART V Incarceration Elsewhere
- Introduction 131
- Japanese Internment and Relocation: The Hawaii Experience 135
- The Japanese Canadians and World War II 139
- The Latin-American Japanese and World War II 142
-
PART VI Effects of Incarceration Analyzed
- Introduction 147
- The Effects of the Evacuation on the Japanese Americans 151
- Psychological Effects of the Camps on Japanese Americans 159
- Evacuation and Economic Loss: Questions and Perspectives 163
- The Concentration Camps and Japanese Economic Losses in California Agriculture, 1900-1942 168
- Judicial Parsimony and Military Necessity Disinterred: A Reexamination of the Japanese Exclusion Cases, 1943-44 176
-
PART VII The Redress Movement
- Introduction 187
- The Japanese American Citizens League and the Struggle for Redress 191
- Redress as a Movement T awards Enfranchisement 196
- Coram Nobis and Redress 200
- With Liberty and Justice for Some: The Case for Compensation to Japanese Americans Imprisoned During World War II 203
-
PART VIII Negative Reactions to Redress
- Letters from John J. McCloy and Karl R. Bendetsen 211
-
PART IX Redress Achieved
- Redress Achieved, 1983 -1990 217
- Appendix: Public Law 100-383 225
- Supplementary Bibliography 233
- Index 235
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface to the Original Edition vii
- Preface to the Revised Edition viii
- A Note on the Editors and Authors ix
- Chronology of Japanese American History xv
-
PART I Relocation, Redress, and the Report
- The Conference Keynote Address: Relocation, Redress, and the Report A Historical Appraisal 1
-
PART II Prewar Japanese America
- Introduction 11
- The Uprooting of My Two Communities 15
- The Uprooting of Seattle 18
-
PART III Life in the Camps
- Introduction 21
- Camp Memories: Rough and Broken Shards 27
- An Issei Internee's Experiences 31
- My Two Years at Heart Mountain: The Difficult Role of an Applied Anthropologist 33
- A Teacher at Topaz 38
- The Impact of Incarceration on the Education of Nisei Schoolchildren 44
- American Mistreatment of Internees During World War II: Enemy Alien Japanese 52
- The Santa Fe Internment Camp and the Justice Department Program for Enemy Aliens 57
- The Forced Migrations of West Coast Japanese Americans, 1942-1946: A Quantitative Note 72
-
PART IV Reactions to the Camps
- Introduction 75
- Racial Nativism and Origins of Japanese American Relocation 79
- Congressional Opinion and War Relocation, 1943 88
- Utah's Ambiguous Reception: The Relocated Japanese Americans 92
- Forty Years Later: Delta High School Students Look at Topaz 99
- Japanese Americans in Idaho 103
- Western Reaction to the Relocated Japanese Americans: The Case of Wyoming 112
- Seattle's Peace Churches and Relocation 117
- "Fellow ... Feelers with the Afflicted": The Christian Churches and the Relocation of the Japanese Ouring World War II 123
-
PART V Incarceration Elsewhere
- Introduction 131
- Japanese Internment and Relocation: The Hawaii Experience 135
- The Japanese Canadians and World War II 139
- The Latin-American Japanese and World War II 142
-
PART VI Effects of Incarceration Analyzed
- Introduction 147
- The Effects of the Evacuation on the Japanese Americans 151
- Psychological Effects of the Camps on Japanese Americans 159
- Evacuation and Economic Loss: Questions and Perspectives 163
- The Concentration Camps and Japanese Economic Losses in California Agriculture, 1900-1942 168
- Judicial Parsimony and Military Necessity Disinterred: A Reexamination of the Japanese Exclusion Cases, 1943-44 176
-
PART VII The Redress Movement
- Introduction 187
- The Japanese American Citizens League and the Struggle for Redress 191
- Redress as a Movement T awards Enfranchisement 196
- Coram Nobis and Redress 200
- With Liberty and Justice for Some: The Case for Compensation to Japanese Americans Imprisoned During World War II 203
-
PART VIII Negative Reactions to Redress
- Letters from John J. McCloy and Karl R. Bendetsen 211
-
PART IX Redress Achieved
- Redress Achieved, 1983 -1990 217
- Appendix: Public Law 100-383 225
- Supplementary Bibliography 233
- Index 235