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Impounded People : Japanese-Americans in the Relocation Centers
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ISBN: 0816501750 0816541604 Year: 2021 Publisher: University of Arizona Press

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Abstract

This important final report of the War Relocation Authority, written in 1946 and now released in book form with a comprehensive introduction by Edward H. Spicer, describes the growth and changes in the community life and how attitudes of Japanese-American relocatees and WRA administrators evolved, adjusted, and affected one another on political, social, and psychological levels.

Japanese and Chinese immigrant activists : organizing in American and international Communist movements, 1919-1933
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ISBN: 9786611092603 0978813543543 1281092606 0813543541 0813540410 0813540402 9780813543543 9781281092601 9780813540405 9780813540412 Year: 2007 Publisher: New Brunswick, N.J. : Rutgers University Press,

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Japanese and Chinese immigrants in the United States have traditionally been characterized as hard workers who are hesitant to involve themselves in labor disputes or radical activism. How then does one explain the labor and Communist organizations in the Asian immigrant communities that existed from coast to coast between 1919 and 1933? Their organizers and members have been, until now, largely absent from the history of the American Communist movement. In Japanese and Chinese Immigrant Activists, Josephine Fowler brings us the first in-depth account of Japanese and Chinese immigrant radicalism inside the United States and across the Pacific. Drawing on multilingual correspondence between left-wing and party members and other primary sources, such as records from branches of the Japanese Workers Association and the Chinese Nationalist Party, Fowler shows how pressures from the Comintern for various sub-groups of the party to unite as an “American” working class were met with resistance. The book also challenges longstanding stereotypes about the relationships among the Communist Party in the United States, the Comintern, and the Soviet Party.

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