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'Life, liberty, and the pursuit of Japs': Japanese American internment during World War II and its challenge to Americanism.

机译:“生活,自由和追求梦想”:第二次世界大战期间的日裔美国人实习及其对美国主义的挑战。

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摘要

"America promised freedom, but didn't uphold it," observed one of the 120,000 Japanese Americans who had been evacuated from her home on the West Coast after the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. Perhaps glancing down the rows of barracks, around the desert landscape, or to the fence that defined her World War II internment, she continued, "Witness life, liberty, and the pursuit of Japs." Though exceedingly acerbic, this woman's reproach draws attention to the nation's failure to maintain the democratic principles established at its founding and, ultimately, encapsulates the topic of this thesis.;Though Pearl Harbor appropriately triggered a national sense of fear and vulnerability, more importantly, it precipitated a touchstone event: the evacuation and relocation of all ethnic Japanese living in southern Arizona and the western portions of California, Oregon, and Washington. Citing military necessity while basing exclusion criteria solely on race, the evacuation order effectively exiled over ninety percent of America's ethnic Japanese---two-thirds of whom were American citizens---from their homes on the West Coast. It compelled these men, women, and children to leave virtually all of their possessions and mechanisms of social support and confined them to internment camps surrounded by barbed wire and armed guards. There most remained incarcerated without trial for the duration of World War II.;This thesis explores the consequences of this event. It argues that the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II challenged notions of Americanism---the very principles that defined America---and profoundly affected Japanese Americans' sense of identity.;Immigrants and citizens alike have been taught that the United States is committed to democracy and personal freedoms, while citizens are ostensibly extended the rights of free speech and free association, security from unreasonable searches and seizure of property, and a trial by peers; yet as this thesis reveals, the mass internment of an entire group of people solely on the basis of race challenged the ideals America espoused, including those codified by its constitution. Indeed, this chapter in American history challenges the concept of what it means to be an American, Japanese American's claim to Americanness, and individual's sense of identity as Americans of Japanese descent.;Although it focuses on the years between 1942 and 1945, the period that witnessed Japanese-American internment, this thesis situates its analysis within a longer historical narrative that details Japanese Americans' early experiences in the U.S. Defining what it means to be an American, this paper shows how Japanese Americans explored their Americanness while incarcerated, revealing further that Japanese Americans at the Minidoka Relocation Center in Idaho explored their American and Japanese identity through mundane activities that were embraced as part of a larger effort to create normalcy in the midst of the physical, emotional, and psychological difficulties of dispossession, displacement, and confinement.
机译:在1941年12月7日对珍珠港的袭击之后,从她在西海岸的家中撤离的12万名日裔美国人中的一位观察到:“美国承诺了自由,但并未捍卫自由。”也许继续往下走,看看沙漠景观周围的营房行列,还是看过定义她第二次世界大战实习生的围栏,她继续说道:“见证生活,自由和追求日本。”尽管这是极其尖刻的话,但这位妇女的责备引起了人们对国家未能维持其成立时确立的民主原则的关注,并最终封装了本论文的主题。;尽管珍珠港恰当地引发了民族的恐惧感和脆弱性,更重要的是,它引发了一个试金石事件:居住在亚利桑那州南部以及加利福尼亚州,俄勒冈州和华盛顿州西部的所有日本人的撤离和迁移。撤离令以军事上的必要性为依据,而排他性标准则完全基于种族,因此撤离令实际上将他们90%以上的美国日裔(其中三分之二是美国公民)从他们在西海岸的家中流放。它迫使这些男人,女人和孩子几乎放弃了他们所有的财产和社会支持机制,并将他们限制在被带刺铁丝网和武装警卫包围的拘留营中。在第二次世界大战期间,大部分未经审判就被关押的囚犯。本论文探讨了这一事件的后果。它辩称,第二次世界大战期间日裔美国人的大规模监禁挑战了美国主义的概念(定义美国的基本原则),并深刻影响了日裔美国人的认同感。国家致力于民主和人身自由,而公民表面上则扩大了言论自由和自由结社的权利,不受不合理的搜查和没收财产的安全以及同伴的审判;然而,正如本论文所揭示的那样,仅靠种族为基础的整个人的大规模拘禁就挑战了美国所拥护的理想,包括其宪法编纂的理想。的确,美国历史的这一章挑战了成为美国人的含义,日裔美国人对美国人的主张以及个人对日裔美国人的认同感的概念;尽管它着重于1942年至1945年之间的这段时期。本文见证了日裔美国人的拘留,本文将其分析放在一个较长的历史叙述中,该叙事详细介绍了日裔美国人在美国的早期经历,定义了成为美国人的含义,本文显示了日裔美国人在被监禁期间如何探索他们的美国身份,并进一步揭示了这一点。在爱达荷州Minidoka搬迁中心的日裔美国人通过平凡的活动探索了他们的美国和日本身份,这些活动是为在处分,流离失所和禁闭所带来的身体,情感和心理困难中努力建立常态而做出的更大努力的一部分。

著录项

  • 作者

    Herzinger, Kyna Ranell.;

  • 作者单位

    University of South Carolina.;

  • 授予单位 University of South Carolina.;
  • 学科 History United States.;Asian American Studies.
  • 学位 M.A.
  • 年度 2010
  • 页码 75 p.
  • 总页数 75
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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