| Cover Title Page Copyright Page Contents Foreword Preface Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1. Growing Up American Chapter 2. A Yank in France, a Jap in America Chapter 3. To Manzanar Chapter 4. Resistance in Manzanar Chapter 5. Stepping Back Chapter 6. Isolating Citizen Dissidents Chapter 7. Turmoil at Tule Chapter 8. Renunciation Chapter 9. Japan Afterword Notes Glossary Bibliography Index |"A substantial contribution to Japanese American historiography and collective memory. Tamura clearly sets forth the importance of dissident leader Joseph Kurihara as a quintessential personification of the transformation of Japanese Americans from patriots to protestors as a consequence of their unjust World War II eviction and imprisonment."—Arthur A. Hansen, coeditor of Reflections on Shattered Windows: Promises and Prospects for Asian American Studies
"Tamura has done a great job of research and examination of this individual and of the history of the Japanese American community during WWII."—International Examiner
"A masterpiece deserving of inclusion in the pantheon of books on Japanese American World War II dissent-protest-resistance."—Nichi Bei Weekly
|Eileen H. Tamura is a professor in the Department of Educational Foundations, College of Education, at the University of Hawai'i Manoa. She is the author of Americanization, Acculturation, and Ethnic Identity: The Nisei Generation in Hawaii and coauthor of The Rise of Modern Japan.