Bültmann & Gerriets
Nisei Naysayer
The Memoir of Militant Japanese American Journalist Jimmie Omura
von James Matsumoto Omura
Verlag: Stanford University Press
Reihe: Asian America
E-Book / EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


Speicherplatz: 24 MB
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ISBN: 978-1-5036-0612-8
Auflage: 1. Auflage
Erschienen am 28.08.2018
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 424 Seiten

Preis: 33,49 €

Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

James Matsumoto Omura (1912-1994) was a newspaper editor and later operated a landscaping business in Denver, Colorado. He received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Asian American Journalists Association in 1989.
Arthur A. Hansen is Professor Emeritus of History and Asian American Studies at California State University, Fullerton.



1. Bainbridge Island Beginnings, 1912-1923
2. Pacific Northwest Coming of Age, 1923-1933
3. Dateline California, 1933-1940
4. Showdown in San Francisco, 1940-1942
5. Denver Disputes and Concentration Camp Dissent, 1942-1944
6. Rocky Mountain Resistance, 1944
7. Down and Out in Denver, 1944-1945



Among the fiercest opponents of the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II was journalist James "Jimmie" Matsumoto Omura. In his sharp-penned columns, Omura fearlessly called out leaders in the Nikkei community for what he saw as their complicity with the U.S. government's unjust and unconstitutional policies-particularly the federal decision to draft imprisoned Nisei into the military without first restoring their lost citizenship rights. In 1944, Omura was pushed out of his editorship of the Japanese American newspaper Rocky Shimpo, indicted, arrested, jailed, and forced to stand trial for unlawful conspiracy to counsel, aid, and abet violations of the military draft. He was among the first Nikkei to seek governmental redress and reparations for wartime violations of civil liberties and human rights.

In this memoir, which he began writing towards the end of his life, Omura provides a vivid account of his early years: his boyhood on Bainbridge Island; summers spent working in the salmon canneries of Alaska; riding the rails in search of work during the Great Depression; honing his skills as a journalist in Los Angeles and San Francisco. By the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor, Omura had already developed a reputation as one of the Japanese American Citizens League's most adamant critics, and when the JACL leadership acquiesced to the mass incarceration of American-born Japanese, he refused to remain silent, at great personal and professional cost. Shunned by the Nikkei community and excluded from the standard narrative of Japanese American wartime incarceration until later in life, Omura seeks in this memoir to correct the "cockeyed history to which Japanese America has been exposed."

Edited and with an introduction by historian Arthur A. Hansen, and with contributions from Asian American activists and writers Frank Chin, Yosh Kuromiya, and Frank Abe, Nisei Naysayer provides an essential, firsthand account of Japanese American wartime resistance.


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