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Mary Kitagawa

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This book tells the story of Japanese Canadian activist Mary Kitagawa. In the aftermath of the Pearl Harbor bombing, Mary was one of roughly 22,000 Nikkei uprooted from their homes on the Pacific c...
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  • 05 November 2024
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This book tells the story of Japanese Canadian activist Mary Kitagawa. In the aftermath of the Pearl Harbor bombing, Mary was one of roughly 22,000 Nikkei uprooted from their homes on the Pacific coast and forbidden to return to western British Columbia until long after World War II had officially ended. In the decades that followed, Mary and her family navigated financial precarity and ostracism, but also found ways to pursue both economic stability and political engagement. Beginning with Mary's grandparents, who were among the earliest immigrants to Canada from Japan, this book tracks the family's experiences—and those of the larger Nikkei Canadian community—from the late 1800s to the present.

  Concentrating on the interpersonal and intergenerational bonds that shaped Kitagawa, Karen M. Inouye describes the increasingly activist sensibilities that arose from transformative relationships—with family members, other members of the Nikkei Canadian community, Doukhobors, First Nations peoples, and white allies—as well as in response to the anti-Asian racism that Kitagawa encountered in many forms throughout her life. Inouye presents the Nikkei Canadian experience not as a linear triumph over a single adversity, but as a continual process of identity formation in relation to obstacles and opportunities, suffering and joy, isolation and connection.

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Price: $25.00
Pages: 246
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Asian America
Publication Date: 05 November 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503641075
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"The story of Mary Kitagawa is an absorbing look at how history shapes our identities and inspires us to search for our deepest selves. In examining one life, Karen M. Inouye presents a layered and nuanced look at generations of people of Japanese descent in Canada and widens our view of the tragedy and injustice of Japanese incarceration during World War II." —Pulitzer Prize Winner Marcia Chatelain, author of Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America
Karen M. Inouye is Ruth N. Halls Associate Professor of History and Asian American Studies at Indiana University—Bloomington.
Introduction
1. Nikkei Canadian Lives before World War II
2. An Uprooted Childhood
3. Sensing Right and Wrong in Internal Exile
4. College and the Beginnings of Political Self-Awareness
5. Transformational Relationships
Afterword