Forced Out
A Nikkei Woman’s Search for a Home in America (Nikkei in the Americas)
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Narrado por:
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Naomi Mayo
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De:
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Judy Y. Kawamoto
Sobre este áudio
Forced Out: A Nikkei Woman’s Search for a Home in America offers insight into “voluntary evacuation,” a little-known Japanese American experience during World War II, and the lasting effects of cultural trauma. Of the roughly 120,000 people forced from their homes by Executive Order 9066, around 5,000 were able to escape incarceration beforehand by fleeing inland. In a series of beautifully written essays, Judy Kawamoto recounts her family’s flight from their home in Washington to Wyoming, their later moves to Montana and Colorado, and the influence of those experiences on the rest of her life. Hers is a story shared by the many families who lost everything and had to start over in often suspicious and hostile environments.
Kawamoto vividly illustrates the details of her family’s daily life, the discrimination and financial hardship they experienced, and the isolation that came from experiencing the horrors of the 1940s very differently than many other Japanese Americans. Chapters address her personal and often unconscious reactions to her parents’ trauma, as well as her own subsequent travels around much of the world, exploring, learning, enjoying, but also unconsciously acting out a continual search for a home.
Forced Out will be of great interest to the general listener, as well as students and scholars of ethnic studies, Asian American studies, history, education, and mental health.
The book is published by University Press of Colorado. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.
©2020 University Press of Colorado (P)2021 Redwood AudiobooksResumo da Crítica
“The book is important as a thoughtful affirmation of the need for greater awareness of psychic and intergenerational trauma.” (Tim Yamamura, University of Northern Arizona)
“Important for anyone interested in issues of racial and ethnic inequalities, civil liberties, culture and identity development, and trauma.” (Patti Sakurai, Oregon State University)