Japanese American Internment Camps: Resistance and Perseverance

Item

Title
Japanese American Internment Camps: Resistance and Perseverance
Author
Nicholas H Sieber
Faculty Advisor
Kimberly Jensen
Date
6/12/2020
Abstract
This thesis examines the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II from the internees’ side, the side of the United States government and the general non-Japanese American population’s side. It examines three key aspects of internment from the Japanese American perspective: initial feelings of the camps and their conditions; the ways in which Japanese Americans maintained a traditional life during internment or, particularly in the case of Japanese American women, found new opportunities through internment to break with certain traditions; and how both age and gender played a role in their perception of events as well as their ability to resist internment. Oral history interviews with Japanese Americans who were interned provide the main primary source information. Military documents of camp examinations and newspaper articles show the racist climate of the United States during internment. Using these primary sources in conjunction with secondary scholarship from some of the most respected names in Asian American Studies, Roger Daniels, Linda Tamura and Valarie Matsumoto, who have all written extensively on the topic, a better understanding of the experiences Japanese Americans had in the internment camps can be gained. Japanese Americans resisted both racism and internment during this time.
Type
Text
Language
eng
Rights
Western Oregon University Library has determined, as of 06/12/2020, this item is in copyright, which is held by Nicholas H. Sieber. Users may use the item in accordance with copyright limitations and exceptions, including fair use. For other uses, please ask permission from the author Nicholas H. Sieber nsieber17@mail.wou.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Department
History
Identifier
his/281