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I call to remembrance : Toyo Suyemoto's years of internment / edited by Susan B. Richardson.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Suyemoto, Toyo, 1916-2003.
Contributor:
Richardson, Susan B., 1936-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Japanese Americans--Forced removal and internment, 1942-1945.
Japanese Americans.
World War, 1939-1945--Concentration camps--Utah--Topaz.
World War, 1939-1945.
World War, 1939-1945--Personal narratives, American.
Japanese Americans--Biography.
Central Utah Relocation Center.
Suyemoto, Toyo, 1916-2003.
Suyemoto, Toyo.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (256 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
New Brunswick, N.J. : Rutgers University Press, c2007.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Toyo Suyemoto is known informally by literary scholars and the media as "Japanese America's poet laureate." But Suyemoto has always described herself in much more humble terms. A first-generation Japanese American, she has identified herself as a storyteller, a teacher, a mother whose only child died from illness, and an internment camp survivor. Before Suyemoto passed away in 2003, she wrote a moving and illuminating memoir of her internment camp experiences with her family and infant son at Tanforan Race Track and, later, at the Topaz Relocation Center in Utah, from 1942 to 1945. A uniquely poetic contribution to the small body of internment memoirs, Suyemoto's account includes information about policies and wartime decisions that are not widely known, and recounts in detail the way in which internees adjusted their notions of selfhood and citizenship, lending insight to the complicated and controversial questions of citizenship, accountability, and resistance of first- and second-generation Japanese Americans. Suyemoto's poems, many written during internment, are interwoven throughout the text and serve as counterpoints to the contextualizing narrative. Suyemoto's poems, many written during internment, are interwoven throughout the text and serve as counterpoints to the contextualizing narrative. A small collection of poems written in the years following her incarceration further reveal the psychological effects of her experience.
Contents:
Front matter
Contents
Editor’s Preface
Note on the Drawings
Introduction
Author’s Preface
1 Berkeley
2 April 1942
3 Morning of Departure
4 Growing up in Nihonmachi
5 Intake at Tanforan
6 Tanforan Days
7 Tanforan High School
8 Kay’s Illness
9 Another Move
10 Entry into Topaz
11 Settling In
12 As 1942 Ended
13 Block 4-8-E
14 Schooling in Topaz
15 Topaz Public Library
16 Sensei
17 Into Another Year
18 Registration for Loyalty
19 Weighed in the Balance
20 We Be Brethren
21 In the Length of Days
22 The Dust before the Wind
23 The Dispersal
24 Tree of the People (Topaz Community)
Afterword
References
About the Editor
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [207]-208).
ISBN:
1-281-22425-1
9786611224257
0-8135-4154-9
OCLC:
648350280

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