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Strangers in the Heartland: Cultural Identity in Flux, Japanese Americans in Chicago, 1892--1942.

机译:《腹地的陌生人:通货膨胀中的文化认同》,日裔美国人,芝加哥,1892--1942年。

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摘要

My project explores the experiences of the Japanese as they settled in Chicago and built a community. It examines ways in which these Japanese immigrants identified themselves between the Empire of Japan, and the United States. It also looks at the ways in the print media of the day talked about and presented the Japanese immigrants.;The central questions raised here are quite specific. What problems did pre-World War II Japanese migrants in Chicago encounter and how did they respond to them? Did the small size of the Japanese community affect the experiences of its members? Through what organizations and leaders were the Japanese linked to one another? Where were the Japanese located within Chicago's pre-World War II racial hierarchies? How did they respond to the growing anti-Asian sentiment in the United States, particularly in the 1930s? I also tried to touch on yet not fully answer two larger questions. First, in what ways did the experience of Japanese in the Midwest differ from that of their compatriots on the West Coast? Secondly, what can immigration historians learn from my study of a very small group situated within a large urban space? I hope to be able to respond these issues in the future.;For the present, my goal is to show how a small Asian community managed to survive in the racially and ethnically diverse urban space of pre-World War II Chicago by drawing on both its Old World heritage and its New World experiences. Far from the intense anti-Japanese sentiment of the West Coast, Japanese Chicagoans were able to remain loyal to the Emperor and supportive of the motherland up to (and in some cases beyond) the outbreak of World War II. Yet, at the same time, the leaders of the Japanese community in Chicago reached out to and absorbed some of the values of the native-born who lived around them. At times, they were rejected. The result was the development of a complex trans-national identity, which kept migrants in close touch with the Imperial Japan even as it facilitated their survival within the city of Chicago.
机译:我的项目探索了日本人在芝加哥定居并建立社区时的经历。它研究了这些日本移民在日本帝国和美国之间如何确定自己的身份。它还探讨了当今印刷媒体谈论和介绍日本移民的方式。这里提出的中心问题非常具体。第二次世界大战前在芝加哥的日本移民遇到了哪些问题,他们如何应对?小规模的日本社区会影响其成员的经历吗?日本人通过哪些组织和领导人相互联系?在二战前的种族等级体系中,日本人位于哪里?他们如何应对美国日益增长的反亚洲情绪,尤其是在1930年代?我还尝试谈谈尚未完全回答的两个更大的问题。首先,日本人在中西部的经历与西岸同胞的经历有什么不同?其次,移民历史学家可以从我对位于大城市空间中的一小群人的研究中学到什么?我希望将来能够对这些问题做出回应。;就目前而言,我的目标是展示一个小的亚洲社区如何在两个第二次世界大战前芝加哥的种族和族裔多样化的城市空间中生存。它的旧世界遗产和新世界的经验。在第二次世界大战爆发之前(甚至在某些情况下),日本芝加哥人远离西海岸的强烈反日情绪,仍然能够忠于皇帝并支持祖国。然而,与此同时,芝加哥的日本人社区的领导人接触并吸收了生活在他们周围的当地人的一些价值观。有时,他们被拒绝了。其结果是发展了复杂的跨国身份,使移民与日本帝国保持着密切联系,尽管它促进了他们在芝加哥市内的生存。

著录项

  • 作者

    Hoshino, Mayumi.;

  • 作者单位

    Indiana University.;

  • 授予单位 Indiana University.;
  • 学科 History United States.;Sociology Ethnic and Racial Studies.;Asian American Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2012
  • 页码 318 p.
  • 总页数 318
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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