That Damned Fence: The Literature of the Japanese American Prison Camps
Autor Heather Hathawayen Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 iul 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190098315
ISBN-10: 0190098317
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 32 b/w halftones
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190098317
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 32 b/w halftones
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Heather Hathaway's That Damned Fence provides the first ever in-depth study of the writing produced by Japanese Americans confined in the different WRA camps during World War II. Particularly novel and intriguing is how Hathaway connects the lived experience of confinement for the inmate authors with their writing.
Heather Hathaway expertly delves into the inner turmoil that Japanese Americans expressed in fiction, poetry, editorials, and graphic arts during their unjustified wartime incarceration. Focusing on familiar and lesser-known works, her book is a significant, well-written study of an ethnic minority's questioning and assertions of Americanness when Japan and the United States came to blows.
Writing in the camps was often an act of resistance to the camps, as That Damned Fence so clearly reveals. Heather Hathaway breaks new ground in showing how the incarcerated people disguised their protest while writing under the eyes of government censors. This is essential reading for any study of the literature of incarceration.
Heather Hathaway's That Damned Fence takes a fresh approach to the study of Japanese American literature of incarceration. Instead of considering the incarceration as a single experience with a single oeuvre, she focuses on the distinctiveness of each camp's setting and literary culture. Imagery and artistry are different in Tule Lake versus Topaz versus Rowher and so on. This is a revelation.
What sets this book apart from others about the Japanese American wartime concentration camps is Heather Hathaway's ability to adeptly and clearly differentiate the characteristics of each camp— types and classes of people, the weather and climate, landscape, educational facilities, extracurricular activities, and other details which have never been explored. She uses first-hand accounts and diaries which add an immediacy and freshness to the text. This book is a must-read for scholars and general public members wishing to deepen their knowledge of this dark period in American history.
Through engaging analysis of camp literary magazines and novels, Heather Hathaway illuminates Japanese Americans' wide-ranging responses to their forced confinement. Whether incisive critiques of government hypocrisy or poignant portrayals of camp life, their writing provided a critical outlet through which they grappled with the oppressive environmental, political, and cultural conditions of their incarceration. At a time when most Americans silenced Japanese American voices or viewed them as suspect, That Damned Fence underscores their outspoken views on wartime policy and the lasting power they wielded with their pens.
What Heather Hathaway has done in That Damned Fence is showcase for us— through meticulous documentation and excavation—a stunning generation of Japanese American writers and artists who produced vibrant literary magazines in the internment camps. The genius of their collective creative work—most of which has remained largely unknown these past seventy-five years—is revealed in Hathaway's pages, waiting to be discovered and enjoyed by a new audience of readers.
In making so valuable a contribution to the scholarship on Japanese American incarceration literature, That Damned Fence provides a rich resource for further inquiry.
Heather Hathaway expertly delves into the inner turmoil that Japanese Americans expressed in fiction, poetry, editorials, and graphic arts during their unjustified wartime incarceration. Focusing on familiar and lesser-known works, her book is a significant, well-written study of an ethnic minority's questioning and assertions of Americanness when Japan and the United States came to blows.
Writing in the camps was often an act of resistance to the camps, as That Damned Fence so clearly reveals. Heather Hathaway breaks new ground in showing how the incarcerated people disguised their protest while writing under the eyes of government censors. This is essential reading for any study of the literature of incarceration.
Heather Hathaway's That Damned Fence takes a fresh approach to the study of Japanese American literature of incarceration. Instead of considering the incarceration as a single experience with a single oeuvre, she focuses on the distinctiveness of each camp's setting and literary culture. Imagery and artistry are different in Tule Lake versus Topaz versus Rowher and so on. This is a revelation.
What sets this book apart from others about the Japanese American wartime concentration camps is Heather Hathaway's ability to adeptly and clearly differentiate the characteristics of each camp— types and classes of people, the weather and climate, landscape, educational facilities, extracurricular activities, and other details which have never been explored. She uses first-hand accounts and diaries which add an immediacy and freshness to the text. This book is a must-read for scholars and general public members wishing to deepen their knowledge of this dark period in American history.
Through engaging analysis of camp literary magazines and novels, Heather Hathaway illuminates Japanese Americans' wide-ranging responses to their forced confinement. Whether incisive critiques of government hypocrisy or poignant portrayals of camp life, their writing provided a critical outlet through which they grappled with the oppressive environmental, political, and cultural conditions of their incarceration. At a time when most Americans silenced Japanese American voices or viewed them as suspect, That Damned Fence underscores their outspoken views on wartime policy and the lasting power they wielded with their pens.
What Heather Hathaway has done in That Damned Fence is showcase for us— through meticulous documentation and excavation—a stunning generation of Japanese American writers and artists who produced vibrant literary magazines in the internment camps. The genius of their collective creative work—most of which has remained largely unknown these past seventy-five years—is revealed in Hathaway's pages, waiting to be discovered and enjoyed by a new audience of readers.
In making so valuable a contribution to the scholarship on Japanese American incarceration literature, That Damned Fence provides a rich resource for further inquiry.
Notă biografică
Heather Hathaway is Professor of English at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin and author of Caribbean Waves: Relocating Claude McKay and Paule Marshall.