Honored and Dishonored Guests : Westerners in Wartime Japan /
"Recovers and chronicles Western communities in wartime Japan and uses that body of experiences to reconsider allegations of Japanese racism and racial hatred. The book's accounts of stranded Westerners yield a unique interpretation of race relations and wartime life in Japan"--
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge, Massachusetts :
The Harvard University Asia Center,
2017.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Part I. Caucasians and race in Imperial Japan: 1. Racism, race consciousness, and Imperial Japan: A normative racism
- Aspects of race consciousness in Imperial Japan
- Sources of cognitive dissonance
- 2. Privilege and prejudice: being a westerner in Imperial Japan: Early foreign settlements
- The Yokohama community
- Ornaments in isolation: the Frank and Balk families
- Class insularity at Western resorts
- 3. Handling the other within: approaches to preemptive containment (1939-41): Direct and indirect forms of containment
- Japan's "Jewish Problem" and the Kobe community
- A repressed, mobilized Christianity
- Part II. Lives in limbo: containment in the wake of Pearl Harbor: 4. First responses and containment protocols after Pearl Harbor (1941-43): A new taxonomy of foreigners
- Temporary detentions of suspicious enemy nationals
- Enemy diplomatic staff under house arrest
- Racialized others: Jews and Asians
- 5. Watched and unseen: non-enemy nationals after Pearl Harbor (1941-43): Fracture and emotional conflict
- Withdrawal and invisibility
- Japanese ambivalence and anti-foreign sentiment
- 6. Fleeing for the hills: evacuee communities in Hakone and Karuizawa (1943-45): "Running smoothly" in Gora
- Karuizawa: a "strange miniature Babel"
- Part III. Lives behind walls: Japan's treatment of enemy civilians: 7. From humiliation to hunger: the internment of enemy nationals (1941-45): Camp administration
- The initial wave (1941-42)
- Stringency and privation (1942-45)
- 8. Torture and testimony: the incarceration of suspected spies (1944-45): Interrogation
- Trial and imprisonment
- Death and liberation
- 9. Race war?: on japanese pragmatism and racial ambivalence: The failure of propaganda
- Continuity and change following the surrender.