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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
- Acknowledgments xv
- Maps xviii
- Introduction 3
- 1. The Forgetting Subjects and the Subjects Forgotten 19
- 2. The Silencing Continues: ‘Speaking for’ Japanese Canadian Subjects of the Internment 56
- 3. Method, Memory, and the Subjects of the Internment 79
- 4. Cartographies of Violence: Creating Carceral Spaces and Expelling Japanese Canadians from the Nation 95
- 5. Gendering the Subjects of the Internment: The Interior Camps of British Columbia 125
- 6. Economies of the Carceral: The ‘Self- Support’ Camps, Sugar Beet Farms, and Domestic Work 167
- 7. The Known and Unknown: Subjects Lost, Subjects Re-membered 203
- 8. ‘It Is Part of My Inheritance’: Handing Down Memory of the Internment 226
- 9. ‘Crushing the White Wall with Our Names’: Re-membering the Internment in White Spaces 267
- 10. Conclusion: Re-membering the Subjects of the ‘Internment’ 303
- Notes 321
- Bibliography 403
- Index 435
- STUDIES IN GENDER AND HISTORY 459
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
- Acknowledgments xv
- Maps xviii
- Introduction 3
- 1. The Forgetting Subjects and the Subjects Forgotten 19
- 2. The Silencing Continues: ‘Speaking for’ Japanese Canadian Subjects of the Internment 56
- 3. Method, Memory, and the Subjects of the Internment 79
- 4. Cartographies of Violence: Creating Carceral Spaces and Expelling Japanese Canadians from the Nation 95
- 5. Gendering the Subjects of the Internment: The Interior Camps of British Columbia 125
- 6. Economies of the Carceral: The ‘Self- Support’ Camps, Sugar Beet Farms, and Domestic Work 167
- 7. The Known and Unknown: Subjects Lost, Subjects Re-membered 203
- 8. ‘It Is Part of My Inheritance’: Handing Down Memory of the Internment 226
- 9. ‘Crushing the White Wall with Our Names’: Re-membering the Internment in White Spaces 267
- 10. Conclusion: Re-membering the Subjects of the ‘Internment’ 303
- Notes 321
- Bibliography 403
- Index 435
- STUDIES IN GENDER AND HISTORY 459