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Japanese American Incarceration Stephanie D. Hinnershitz

Japanese American Incarceration By Stephanie D. Hinnershitz

Japanese American Incarceration by Stephanie D. Hinnershitz


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Japanese American Incarceration Summary

Japanese American Incarceration: The Camps and Coerced Labor during World War II by Stephanie D. Hinnershitz

Between 1942 and 1945, the U.S. government wrongfully imprisoned thousands of Japanese American citizens and profited from their labor. Japanese American Incarceration recasts the forced removal and incarceration of approximately 120,000 Japanese Americans during World War II as a history of prison labor and exploitation.
Following Franklin Roosevelt's 1942 Executive Order 9066, which called for the exclusion of potentially dangerous groups from military zones along the West Coast, the federal government placed Japanese Americans in makeshift prisons throughout the country. In addition to working on day-to-day operations of the camps, Japanese Americans were coerced into harvesting crops, digging irrigation ditches, paving roads, and building barracks for little to no compensation and often at the behest of privately run businesses-all in the name of national security.
How did the U.S. government use incarceration to address labor demands during World War II, and how did imprisoned Japanese Americans respond to the stripping of not only their civil rights, but their labor rights as well? Using a variety of archives and collected oral histories, Japanese American Incarceration uncovers the startling answers to these questions. Stephanie Hinnershitz's timely study connects the government's exploitation of imprisoned Japanese Americans to the history of prison labor in the United States.

Japanese American Incarceration Reviews

Hinnershitz's groundbreaking account investigates how the prison labor system was imposed on Japanese Americans and permanent resident non-citizens of Japanese ancestry who were confined in War Relocation
Authority (WRA) incarceration camps (formerly 'internment' camps) during World War II...[A] significant contribution to the literature of Japanese American incarceration.

* Pacific Historical Review *

About Stephanie D. Hinnershitz

Stephanie Hinnershitz is a historian with the Institute for the Study of War and Democracy at the National WWII Museum and author of two previous books, A Different Shade of Justice: Asian Americans and Civil Rights in the South and Race, Religion, and Civil Rights: Asian Students on the West Coast, 1900-1968.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Chapter 1. The Economics of Incarceration and the Blueprint for Japanese American Labor
Chapter 2. What Good Was My Contract? From Free to Convict Laborers
Chapter 3. Worse Than Prisoners: Labor Resistance in the Detention Centers and Prison Camps
Chapter 4. A Prison by Any Other Name: Labor and the Poston Colony
Chapter 5. Redemptive Labor: Japanese American Resettlement
Conclusion
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments

Additional information

CIN0812253361A
9780812253368
0812253361
Japanese American Incarceration: The Camps and Coerced Labor during World War II by Stephanie D. Hinnershitz
Used - Well Read
Hardback
University of Pennsylvania Press
20211019
320
Winner of Winner of the the Philip Taft Labor History Book Award, granted by the Cornell ILR School 2022 (United States)
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book. We do our best to provide good quality books for you to read, but there is no escaping the fact that it has been owned and read by someone else previously. Therefore it will show signs of wear and may be an ex library book

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