"Japanese Canadian internment" Essays and Research Papers

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    Thomas King Evacuation

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    as equal. Thomas King’s ironic Indigenous story about Japanese Canadian internment during World War II‚ Coyote and the Enemy Aliens‚ and Joy Kogawa’s poem that describes the impact of the internment‚ What do I Remember of the Evacuation‚ both depend on the techniques of point of view and perspective‚ structure‚ and theme. Initially‚ both pieces of writing use point of view and perspective to demonstrate the harsh reality of Japanese internment. They are written in first person point of view which

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    such as our ethnicity‚ intellect‚ or looks to try to find how we are better than some. Hitler did this to the Jews as he wanted the world to have the Aryan race with the Holocaust‚ and America did this to the Japanese during the Japanese internment. The Holocaust and the Japanese internment are very different from one another yet they are both very similar to each other. The Holocaust was the systematic mass slaughter of Jews and other groups deemed inferior by the Nazis. The Holocaust began

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    POW Camps During World War II During World War II there were many camps but the most in America were Internment camps and the most in Japan were American POW camps and they both can be compared and contrasted. In Japan in WWII Japanese doctors and military personnel killed‚ tortured and experimented on thousands of American soldiers who flew and fought in Japan this was exercised by dozens of hospitals and military camps (McCurry). As it says the Americans were not treated very fairly over in Japan’s

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    Melissa Savala Period 4 March 2010 Japanese Internment Essay “Deemed a ‘menace which had to be dealt with‚’ Japanese-Americans were forced into ‘relocation centers.’” After the events of December 7th‚ 1941‚ the west coast of the United States was considered vulnerable to attack by the Japanese. I feel the Japanese internment was wrong‚ because it was based upon fear‚ prejudice‚ and greed. It was also a civil rights violation because the majority of the Japanese detainees were American-born citizens

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    history of Japanese Internment goes back to the surprise attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii on December 7‚ 1941. This day not only changed the lives of many Americans‚ but it also changed the lives of all Japanese immigrants as well as all American citizens of Japanese decent. The nation was in complete shock and the next day President Franklin Roosevelt labeled this day as “a day of infamy”(Inada‚ 30). During the war over 110‚000 Japanese Americans were forced into internment camps by

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    The Japanese diaspora from their homes to the camps was unjustified. It was an act of hypocrisy. When the Japanese were in the internment camps‚ the conditions were very unhygienic. “The poorly built barracks were not much more than wooden frames covered in tarpaper. There was no insulation to ward off the brutal winter cold or the stifling summer heat. Inside‚ they had no running water‚ no kitchen or toilet facilities‚ and blinding dust storms blew dirt and grime through cracks in the walls”(Murphy

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    of the truth as well as hiding from it. In the novel Obasan by Joy Kogawa‚ silence is a part of a culture and is a larger part of a family. The character Naomi allows silence to over come her life‚ which allows her to remain tortured inside the internment camp of her own body. Although the family is living in another country‚ the traditions to Japan are still very strong. In the U.S. silence is generally looked upon as passive while Japan it traditionally signals pensiveness‚ alertness‚ and sensitivity

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    was the Japanese Internment Camp. Hundred thousands of Japanese were forced to relocate away from their homes and incarcerated into a camp. That being said‚ more than half of the hundred thousands of Japanese were legal citizens of the United States; however‚ because of their Japanese blood‚ they are seen as the enemy of the United States. To summarize‚ more than hundred thousands of Japanese that were citizens of the United States had their right(s) stripped away because they were Japanese. This clearly

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    Symbolism in Obasan

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    the novel Obasan‚ Joy Kogawa uses symbolism to communicate short but important messages to readers conveying the various themes of the novel. One main idea expressed through images and symbols includes the deterioration of conditions for the Japanese Canadians as they are stripped of their human qualities and ostracized because of their different appearances. Another major theme accommodates family structure‚ the significance of family in the novel and shows the differing personalities of each member

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    Obasan (Criticism)

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    Since its publication in 1981‚ Joy Kogawa’s Obasan has assumed an important place in Canadian literature and in the broadly-defined‚ Asian-American literary canon. Reviewers immediately heralded the novel for its poetic force and its moving portrayal of an often-ignored aspect of Canadian and American history. Since then‚ critics have expanded upon this initial commentary to examine more closely the themes and images in Kogawa’s work. Critical attention has focused on the difficulties and ambiguities

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