Michael R. Jin is Assistant Professor of History and Global Asian Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Introduction: The Making of a Japanese American Diaspora in the Pacific
1. From Citizens to Emigrants: The Japanese American Transnational Generation in the U.S.-Japan Borderlands
2. From Citizens to the Stateless: Migration, Exclusion, and Nisei Citizenship
3. From Citizens to Enemy Aliens: The "Kibei Problem" and Japanese American Loyalty During World War II
4. Beyond Two Homelands: Kibei Transnationalism in the Making of a Japanese American Diaspora
5. Between Two Empires: Nisei Citizenship and Loyalty in the Pacific Theater
6. Buried Wounds of the Secret Sufferers: Memory, History, and the Japanese American Survivors in the Nuclear Pacific
Epilogue: