A Tragedy of Democracy: Japanese Confinement in North America

Item # 159237.

By Greg Robinson.

The confinement of some 120,000 Japanese Americans during World War II, often called the Japanese American internment, has been described as the worst official civil rights violation of modern U. S. history. Greg Robinson not only offers a bold new understanding of these events but also studies them within a larger time frame and from a transnational perspective. This is the first book to analyze official policy toward West Coast Japanese Americans within a North American context.

Robinson studies confinement on the mainland alongside events in wartime Hawaii, where fears of Japanese Americans justified Army dictatorship, suspension of the Constitution, and the imposition of military tribunals. He similarly covers the treatment of Japanese Americans against Canada's confinement of 22,000 citizens and residents of Japanese ancestry from British Columbia. Robinson recounts the expulsion of almost 5,000 Japanese from Mexico's Pacific Coast and the poignant story of the Japanese Latin Americans who were kidnapped from their homes and interned in the United States. Approaching Japanese confinement as a continental and international phenomenon, Robinson offers a truly kaleidoscopic understanding of its genesis and outcomes.

Paper: 408 pp.

Also available;

Nikkei in the Pacific Northwest: Japanese Americans and Japanese Canadians in the Twentieth CenturyNikkei in the Pacific Northwest: Japanese Americans and Japanese Canadians in the Twentieth Century

Adios to Tears: The Memoirs of a Japanese-Peruvian Internee in U.S. Concentration CampsAdios to Tears: The Memoirs of a Japanese-Peruvian Internee in U.S. Concentration Camps





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