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In Defense of Justice: Joseph Kurihara and the Japanese American Struggle for Equality

Online ISBN:
9780252095061
Print ISBN:
9780252037788
Publisher:
University of Illinois Press
Book

In Defense of Justice: Joseph Kurihara and the Japanese American Struggle for Equality

Eileen H. Tamura
Eileen H. Tamura
University of Hawaii
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Published:
15 September 2013
Online ISBN:
9780252095061
Print ISBN:
9780252037788
Publisher:
University of Illinois Press

Abstract

As a leading dissident in the World War II concentration camps for Japanese Americans, Joseph Yoshisuke Kurihara stands out as an icon of Japanese American resistance. In this biography, Kurihara's life provides a window into the history of Japanese Americans during the first half of the twentieth century. Born in Hawaiʻi to Japanese parents who immigrated to work on the sugar plantations, Kurihara was transformed by the forced removal and incarceration of ethnic Japanese during World War II. As an inmate at Manzanar in California, Kurihara became one of the leaders of a dissident group within the camp and was implicated in “the Manzanar incident,” a serious civil disturbance that erupted on December 6, 1942. In 1945, after three years and seven months of incarceration, he renounced his U.S. citizenship and boarded a ship for Japan, never to return to the United States. Shedding light on the turmoil within the camps as well as the sensitive and formerly unspoken issue of citizenship renunciation among Japanese Americans, this book explores one man's struggles with the complexities of loyalty and dissent.

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