Academic literature on the topic 'American and Japanese'

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Journal articles on the topic "American and Japanese"

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Zunz, Olivier. "Exporting American Individualism." Tocqueville Review 16, no. 2 (January 1995): 99–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/ttr.16.2.99.

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The exporting of goods and capital has been Japan's much heralded success story of the postwar global order, much to the dismay of Americans who had been the prime builders of the Pax Americana on which the world's economy now rests. But despite today's headlines, U.S.-Japanese relations are not just about trade. This paper is about the exporting not of goods but of ideas and the connection between ideology and economic policy. I suggest that the Japanese's peculiar response to American ideas on individualism has helped them develop an ultimately successful economic alternative to American democracy: a non-individualistic capitalism.
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DOAN, NATALIA. "THE 1860 JAPANESE EMBASSY AND THE ANTEBELLUM AFRICAN AMERICAN PRESS." Historical Journal 62, no. 4 (March 28, 2019): 997–1020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x19000050.

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AbstractThe 1860 Japanese embassy inspired within the antebellum African American press an imagined solidarity that subverted American state hierarchies of ‘civilization’ and race. The bodies of the Japanese ambassadors, physically incongruous with American understandings of non-white masculinity, became a centre of cultural contention upon their presence as sophisticated and powerful men on American soil. The African American and abolitionist press, reimagining Japan and the Japanese, reframed racial prejudice as an experience in solidarity, to prove further the equality of all men, and assert African American membership to the worlds of civility and ‘civilization’. The acceptance of the Japanese gave African Americans a new lens through which to present their quest for racial equality and recognition as citizens of American ‘civilization’. This imagined transnational solidarity reveals Japan's influence in the United States as African American publications developed an imagined racial solidarity with Japanese agents of ‘civilization’ long before initiatives of ‘civilization and enlightenment’ appeared on Japan's diplomatic agenda. Examining the writings of non-state actors traditionally excluded from early historical narratives of US–Japan diplomacy reveals an imagined transnational solidarity occurring within and because of an oppressive racial hierarchy, as well as a Japanese influence on antebellum African American intellectual history.
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Lu, Sidney Xu. "Eastward Ho! Japanese Settler Colonialism in Hokkaido and the Making of Japanese Migration to the American West, 1869–1888." Journal of Asian Studies 78, no. 03 (June 20, 2019): 521–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021911819000147.

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This article examines how Japanese colonial migration to Hokkaido in the first two decades of the Meiji era paved the way for Japanese trans-Pacific migration to the United States in the 1880s. It elaborates how Japanese leaders carefully emulated the Anglo-American settler colonialism in Japan's own expansion in Hokkaido by focusing on the emergence of the overpopulation discourse and its political impact in early Meiji. This colonial imitation also inspired the Japanese expansionists to consider the American West an ideal destination for Japanese emigration in the late nineteenth century. This study thus challenges the nation-centered and territory-bound history of the Japanese empire by showing that Japan's colonial expansion in Northeast Asia and Japanese trans-Pacific migration to North America were intertwined since the very beginning of the Meiji era.
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Nee, Victor, and Herbert Y. Wong. "Asian American Socioeconomic Achievement." Sociological Perspectives 28, no. 3 (July 1985): 281–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1389149.

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The analysis emphasizes the need to examine structural and cultural factors in the sending and receiving countries over a historical process to understand how immigrants are incorporated in American society. The article argues that Chinese were slower to make the transition from sojourner to immigrant due to structural characteristics of Chinese village society; whereas Japanese immigrants were not tied by strong family bonds to Japan and made a more rapid transition. The differential timing of family formation and family-run businesses in America account for the more rapid assimilation of Japanese Americans. Changing labor markets after World War II provided new opportunity structures favorable to the socioeconomic mobility of native-born Chinese and Japanese Americans.
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Bhattacharyya, Nitusmita. "Existential Crisis of the Japanese American Woman: A Study of Post War Japanese American Fiction." ENSEMBLE 2, no. 2 (May 4, 2021): 51–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.37948/ensemble-2020-0202-a006.

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The Japanese American women, during the Second World War, suffered from subjugation at different levels of their existence. They had been subjected to marginalization based on their sexual identity within their native community. They were further made to experience discrimination on the basis of their racial status while living as a member of the Japanese diaspora in the United States during the War. The objectification and marginalization of the women had led them to the realization of their existence as a non -entity within and outside their community. However, the internment of Japanese Americans followed by the declaration of Executive Order 9066 by President Roosevelt and the consequent experience of living behind the barbed wire fences left them to struggle with questions raised on their claim to existence and their identity within a space where race and gender contested each other. In my research paper, I have made a humble attempt at studying the existential crisis of the Japanese American women in America during the War.
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Yaguchi, Yujin. "Japanese Reinvention of Self through Hawai‘i’s Japanese Americans." Pacific Historical Review 83, no. 2 (November 2012): 333–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/phr.2014.83.2.333.

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This article investigates the relationship between Asian American and modern Japanese history by analyzing the image of Japanese Americans in postwar Japan. Based on a book of photographs featuring Japanese immigrants in Hawai‘i published in 1956, it analyzes how their image was appropriated and redefined in Japan to promote as well as reinforce the nation’s political and cultural alliance with the United States. The photographs showed the successful acculturation of Japanese in Hawai‘i to the larger American society and urged the Japanese audience to see that their nation’s postwar reconstruction would come through the power and protection of the United States. Japanese Americans in Hawai‘i served as a lens through which the Japanese in Japan could imagine their position under American hegemony in the age of Cold War.
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Peremislov, I. A., and L. G. Peremislov. "JAPANESE AESTHETICS IN AMERICAN SILVER MASTERPIECES." Arts education and science 1, no. 2 (2021): 79–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.36871/hon.202102010.

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Japanese culture with its unique monuments of architecture, sculpture, painting, small forms, decorative and applied arts, occupies a special place in the development of world art. Influenced by China, Japanese masters created their own unique style based on the aesthetics of contemplation and spiritual harmony of man and nature. In the context of "Japan's inspiration" the work refers to the influence of the art of the Land of the Rising Sun on American decorative arts and, in particular, on the silver jewelry industry in trends of a new aesthetic direction of the last third of the XIXth century, the "Aesthetic movement". The article provides a brief overview of the history of the emergence and development of decorative silver art in the United States. The important centers of silversmithing in the USA and the most important American manufacturers of the XIXth century are described in more detail. The article also touches on the influence of Japanese aesthetic ideas on European creative groups and on the formation of innovative ideas in European decorative arts. At the same time, an attempt is made to trace the origin, development trends, evolution and variations of "Japanesque" style in American decorative and applied art, in particular, in the works of Edward Moore and Charles Osborne (Tiffany & Co jewelry multinational company).
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Lee, Jooyoung. "Underdevelopment of American Studies in South Korea: Power and Ignorance." Journal of American-East Asian Relations 18, no. 3-4 (2011): 274–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187656111x614274.

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AbstractThis article asks why the disciplines of American Studies and U.S. history are so markedly underdeveloped in South Korea (Republic of Korea) and what this underdevelopment implies about U.S.-South Korean relations. Under Japanese colonial rule, the study of English in Korea was important for studying abroad, but few students studied America itself. Under American occupation and the following military rule in South Korea, American studies were not attractive to nationalist youth even though the English language remained useful. American cultural diplomacy fostered a small group of Americanists, but university enrollments were small. In the 1980s, Americans were blamed for their support of authoritarian rule. Japanese-trained historians saw American history as too short to be significant, and Japanese institutional legacies were an obstacle. Americans have also been too constricted in imagining who Koreans were, where Korean ambitions lay, and how Korean society worked. In a sense, the very differences between the two nations hindered them from realizing what those differences were.
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Gripentrog, John. "Power and Culture." Pacific Historical Review 84, no. 4 (November 1, 2015): 478–516. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/phr.2015.84.4.478.

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This study explores how the Japanese government endeavored to shape American public opinion through the promotion of Japanese aesthetics in the several years following the Manchurian crisis—and, importantly, how this “cultural diplomacy” was received by Americans. At the center of Japan’s state-sponsored cultural initiative was the Society for International Cultural Relations (Kokusai Bunka Shinkōkai, or KBS). By drawing attention to Japan’s historically esteemed cultural traditions, Japan’s leaders hoped to improve the nation’s image and leverage international power. Critical American reviews and general-interest articles on KBS programs proffered images of a society imbued with a profound sense of artistic sophistication. To this end, the KBS’s cultural diplomacy tended to reinforce a popular assumption among Americans that Japan’s body politic in the 1930s was meaningfully divided between “moderates” and “militarists.” Japan’s cultural diplomacy, however, was undermined from the start by an irreconcilable tension: to simultaneously legitimize regional expansionism and advance internationalist cooperation. After the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War in the summer of 1937 and subsequent proclamations that presumed Japanese hegemony in Asia, naked aggression rendered any lighthearted cultural exchange increasingly irrelevant. Indeed, KBS activities in the United States dwindled—a point that made clear the limits of cultural diplomacy.
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Peremyslov, I. A., and L. G. Peremyslova. "JAPANESE AESTHETICS IN MASTERPIECES OF AMERICAN SILVER." Arts education and science 1, no. 1 (2021): 89–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.36871/hon.202101010.

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Japanese culture with its unique monuments of architecture, sculpture, painting, small forms, decorative and applied arts, occupies a special place in the development of world art. Influenced by China, Japanese masters created their own unique style based on the aesthetics of contemplation and spiritual harmony of man and nature. In the context of "Japan's inspiration" the work refers to the influence of the art of the Land of the Rising Sun on American decorative arts and, in particular, on the silver jewelry industry in trends of a new aesthetic direction of the last third of the XIXth century, the "Aesthetic movement". The article provides a brief overview of the history of the emergence and development of decorative silver art in the United States. The important centers of silversmithing in the USA and the most important American manufacturers of the XIXth century are described in more detail. The article also touches on the influence of Japanese aesthetic ideas on European creative groups and on the formation of innovative ideas in European decorative arts. At the same time, an attempt is made to trace the origin, development trends, evolution and variations of "Japanesque" style in American decorative and applied art, in particular, in the works of Edward Moore and Charles Osborne (Tiffany jewelry multinational company).
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "American and Japanese"

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Mizuno, Takeya. "The Civil Libertarian press, Japanese American press, and Japanese American mass evacuation /." free to MU campus, to others for purchase, 2000. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/mo/fullcit?p9998498.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2000.
Appendices are translation of Japanese articles. Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 366-381). Also available on the Internet.
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Cooper, Molly Malloy. "Japanese American wages, 1940-1990." Columbus, OH : Ohio State University, 2003. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1064341404.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2003.
Title from first page of PDF file. Document formatted into pages; contains xi, 132 p. Includes abstract and vita. Advisor: Richard H. Steckel, Dept. of Economics. Includes bibliographical references (p. 126-132).
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Kobayashi, Junko. ""Bitter sweet home" : celebration of biculturalism in Japanese language Japanese American literature, 1936-1952 /." Diss., University of Iowa, 2005. http://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/97.

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Kawaharada, Dennis. "The rhetoric of identity in Japanese American writings, 1948-1988 /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/9347.

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Fox, Judith Rosuck. "Educating Japanese students in American schools /." Access Digital Full Text version, 1994. http://pocketknowledge.tc.columbia.edu/home.php/bybib/11714190.

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Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1994.
Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Terry Orr. Dissertation Committee: Frank L. Smith. Includes tables. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 167-169).
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Wilbur, Theodore. "American Friends Service Committee efforts to aid Japanese American citizens during World War II." [Boise, Idaho] : Boise State University, 2009. http://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/td/47/.

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Kiyosue, Teppei. "Teaching Japanese in an American high school how Japanese teachers make sense of their American students' communication styles /." Huntington, WV : [Marshall University Libraries], 2004. http://www.marshall.edu/etd/descript.asp?ref=476.

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Hegwood, Robert Alan. "Erasing the Space Between Japanese and American: Progressivism, Nationalism, and Japanese American Resettlement in Portland, Oregon, 1945-1948." PDXScholar, 2011. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/151.

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This study examines the return of Japanese Americans to Portland, Oregon, following their mass incarceration by the United States Federal government between 1942 and 1945. This essay examines the motivations of both returning Japanese Americans and various groups within the white community with equal focus in the hopes of writing a history that provides agency to both groups. The return of Japanese Americans to Portland was an event with broader implications than a mere chapter in the history of Japanese Americans. The rise of the Japanese Exclusion League and other groups interested in preventing the return of Japanese Americans to Oregon had their roots partly in the Oregon progressive coalition of the 1930s known as the Oregon Commonwealth Federation (OCF). Unified behind the cause of public ownership of electricity distribution, racially exclusive progressives such as Oregon Governor Walter M. Pierce and civil rights progressives such as American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Gus J. Solomon sought to protect Oregon's producer class of farmers and workers from exploitation by Portland business interests. After the dissolution of the OCF in 1940 and the attack on Pearl Harbor, the two progressive factions took opposite sides on the issues of the rights of Japanese Americans. In 1945, anti-Japanese organizers across the state, including Pierce, American Legion officials, and Portland politicians called for the permanent exclusion of Japanese Americans. The racist rhetoric of these organizers drew the ire of the Portland Council of Churches, civic leaders, and War Relocation Authority officials, who formed the Portland Citizens Committee to Aid Relocation, the main white group to help returners find housing and employment. Their arguments for tolerance depended heavily on the story of Japanese American military service during World War II. Responding to the shape of debates within the white community, returning Japanese Americans community leaders, especially Toshi Kuge and George Azumano of the Portland Japanese American Citizen's League (JACL), used the rhetoric of military service to demonstrate their Americanness after World War II. The rhetoric of valorous military service provided the ideological center of both remerging Japanese American leadership organizations and connections between the Nikkei community and white civic leaders. After the reestablishment of Japanese American community organizations in Portland, Issei leaders lead a successful fundraising campaign to support a legal challenge to overturn the Oregon Alien Land Law and fund the Portland JACL. Subsequently, between 1946 and 1948, the Portland JACL served as liaisons between the Japanese American community and the white Portlanders interested in overturning laws that challenged Issei social and economic rights. Despite their efforts, Japanese Americans in the early postwar period, along with other Portland minority groups,faced significant discrimination in housing options, employment, and even blood supply. Their experience demonstrates both the power and limitations of arguments for racial tolerance in the early postwar period.
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Syms, Colleen. "Japanese-American Internment: How Nationalism Invalidated Citizenship." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2015. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/707.

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Kost, Cecily R. "Conceptualization of depression among Japanese American elders." Virtual Press, 1997. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1045622.

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This study examined how Japanese American elders conceptualize depression. Japanese American elders age 65 years and older (N = 120) were recruited from a senior center in Los Angeles, CA. Participants read a brief vignette that described an individual who met the criteria for major depression and then filled out a series of questionnaires. Counter to prior theories, these Japanese American elders emphasized that the interpersonal criteria contributed to the individual's problem to a lesser degree than the somatic, emotional, and cognitive criteria. These elders expressed Explanatory Models of depression that were similar to Western Conceptualizations of depression. The results also indicated that having an important role within one's family and higher activity levels tended to be related to lower Geriatric Depression Scale scores. Finally, acculturation, generational status, sex, educational level, and income were not related to problem conceptualization. Clinical implications and directions for future research were discussed.
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Books on the topic "American and Japanese"

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Workshop, Westridge Young Writers, ed. Kids explore America's Japanese American heritage. 2nd ed. Santa Fe, N.M: John Muir Publications, 1996.

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Workshop, Westridge Young Writers, ed. Kids explore America's Japanese American heritage. Santa Fe, N.M: J. Muir Publications, 1994.

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Japanese-American internment in American history. Springfield, NJ: Enslow, 1996.

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J, Grapes Bryan, ed. Japanese American internment camps. San Diego, Calif: Greenhaven Press, 2001.

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J, O'Brien David. The Japanese American experience. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991.

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Sakurai, Gail. Japanese American internment camps. New York: Children's Press, 2002.

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Jennifer, Jopp. The Japanese American experience. Salem, Ore: Willamette University, 2000.

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Calif.) Japanese American National Museum (Los Angeles. Japanese American curriculum framework. Los Angeles, Calif. (369 E. First St., Los Angeles 90012): The Museum, 1999.

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1964-, Dudley William, ed. Japanese American internment camps. San Diego, Calif: Greenhaven Press, 2002.

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Jennifer, Jopp, ed. The Japanese American experience. Salem, Ore: Willamette University, 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "American and Japanese"

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Kitano, Harry H. L., Herb Hatanaka, Wai-Tsang Yeung, and Stanley Sue. "Japanese-American Drinking Patterns." In The American Experience with Alcohol, 335–57. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-0530-7_18.

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Shoji, Rafael, and Frank Usarski. "Japanese Esoteric Buddhism." In Encyclopedia of Latin American Religions, 1–3. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-08956-0_110-1.

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Shoji, Rafael, and Frank Usarski. "Japanese Esoteric Buddhism." In Encyclopedia of Latin American Religions, 679–81. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-27078-4_110.

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Hong, Paul, and Young Won Park. "BREXIT: Case of Japanese Firms." In Rising Asia and American Hegemony, 167–75. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-7635-1_11.

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Moody, Stephen J. "Terms of Address and Identity in American-Japanese Workplace Interaction." In Japanese at Work, 205–34. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-63549-1_9.

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Tsuda, Takeyuki. "The Struggle for Racial Citizenship among Later-Generation Japanese Americans." In Japanese American Ethnicity. NYU Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479821785.003.0005.

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This chapter deals with the persistent racialization of Japanese Americans, which affects mostly third-generation sansei and fourth-generation yonsei. Although their families have been in the United States for generations, they continue to be racialized as foreigners in America, as well as being subject to essentialized assumptions that they are culturally “Japanese.” In response, the sansei, and to a lesser extent the yonsei, engage in everyday struggles for racial citizenship and demand inclusion in the national community as Americans despite their racial differences. It is still uncertain whether such attempts to contest their racialization will cause currently monoracial notions of American identity to be reconsidered in more inclusive and multiracial ways.
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Tsuda, Takeyuki. "Diasporicity and Japanese Americans." In Japanese American Ethnicity. NYU Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479821785.003.0009.

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This chapter situates Japanese American cultural heritage and transnational ties to the ethnic homeland in a broader diasporic context and proposes the concept of diasporicity to address the relative strength of a geographically dispersed ethnic group’s transnational connections and identifications both with the ancestral homeland and to co-ethnics residing in other countries. Although Japanese Americans are members of the Japanese-descent (nikkei) diaspora, prominent national differences prevent them from identifying with other Japanese-descent nikkei as peoples with a common ethnic heritage. However, like other diasporic groups, they have much stronger social connections to their ethnic homeland than they do to other Japanese descent communities in the Americas.
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Tsuda, Takeyuki. "The Postwar Nisei." In Japanese American Ethnicity. NYU Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479821785.003.0003.

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This chapter looks at the postwar second-generation shin-nisei, who are the children of post-1965 Japanese immigrants and came of age in a multicultural and increasingly globalized America at a time when Japan’s image had greatly improved and discrimination against Japanese had considerably lessened. Though culturally assimilated, the shin-nisei have also maintained the ethnic heritage of their parents, and are thus bicultural, as well as bilingual. They have developed transnational identifications with both the United States and Japan and are actively engaged in their ethnic homeland.
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"JAPANESE-AMERICAN CASES." In Reconsidering Judicial Finality, 162–82. University Press of Kansas, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvqmp2sk.13.

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"AMERICAN-JAPANESE RELATIONS." In Behind The Japanese Mask, 110–13. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203040034-20.

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Conference papers on the topic "American and Japanese"

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Guerry, Marine, Takaaki Shochi, Albert Rilliard, and Donna Erickson. "Perception of Prosodic Social Affects in Japanese by American Learners of Japanese." In ISAPh 2016 International Symposium on Applied Phonetics. ISCA: ISCA, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/isaph.2016-17.

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Saeki, Namie. "Contrastive analysis of american English and Japanese pronunciation." In First International Conference on Spoken Language Processing (ICSLP 1990). ISCA: ISCA, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/icslp.1990-310.

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Strange, Winifred, Reiko Akahane-Yamada, B. H. Fitzgerald, and R. Kubo. "Perceptual assimilation of american English vowels by Japanese listeners." In 4th International Conference on Spoken Language Processing (ICSLP 1996). ISCA: ISCA, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/icslp.1996-617.

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Hiranuma, Yuna. "The investigation of suprasegmental transfer by American learners of Japanese." In ISAPh 2018 International Symposium on Applied Phonetics. ISCA: ISCA, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/isaph.2018-11.

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"Analysis of the Education of Japanese and American Mainstream Animation." In 2018 4th International Conference on Education & Training, Management and Humanities Science. Clausius Scientific Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.23977/etmhs.2018.29098.

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Robb, Michael P., and Harold R. Bauer. "Prespeech and early speech coarticulation: american English and Japanese characteristics." In 2nd International Conference on Spoken Language Processing (ICSLP 1992). ISCA: ISCA, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/icslp.1992-85.

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Zhou, Qijia, and Yisui Tang. "Cross-cultural Communication- How Does Japanese Animation Adapt American Cultural Values to Satisfy American Consumers?" In 2021 6th International Conference on Modern Management and Education Technology(MMET 2021). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.211011.102.

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Yanfei, Cheng, and Lin Cunli. "The Comparative Analysis of American and Japanese Wholesalers' Retail Support Strategy." In 2011 International Conference on Information Management, Innovation Management and Industrial Engineering (ICIII). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iciii.2011.152.

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Ooigawa, Tomohiko. "Japanese Listeners’ Perception of American English Intervocalic /l/, /r/ and Flapped /t/." In ISAPh 2016 International Symposium on Applied Phonetics. ISCA: ISCA, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/isaph.2016-13.

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Underwood, William, Richard Marciano, Sandra Laib, Carl Apgar, Luis Beteta, Waleed Falak, Marisa Gilman, et al. "Computational curation of a digitized record series of WWII Japanese-American Internment." In 2017 IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/bigdata.2017.8258184.

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Reports on the topic "American and Japanese"

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Hegwood, Robert. Erasing the Space Between Japanese and American: Progressivism, Nationalism, and Japanese American Resettlement in Portland, Oregon, 1945-1948. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.151.

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Erzen-Toyoshima, Mary. An exploration of cultural differences in Japanese/American intercultural marriages. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.5479.

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Kono, Nariyo. American Students' Expectations of Teachers in the Japanese Language Classroom. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.7134.

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Ross, G. W. Neurotoxins and Neurodegenerative Disorders in Japanese-American Men Living in Hawaii. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada435080.

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Tamura, Hitomi. The Japanese/American interface : a crosscultural study on the approach to discourse. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.5231.

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Ushimaru, Kenji. Japanese and American competition in the development of scroll compressors and its impact on the American air conditioning industry. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6952508.

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Ushimaru, Kenji. Japanese power electronics inverter technology and its impact on the American air conditioning industry. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), August 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6890301.

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8

Taguchi, Hiroyoshi. An investigation of similarity of the value system of the American and Japanese college students. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.2833.

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9

Gagnon, Joseph, and Andrew Rose. How Pervasive is the Product Cycle? The Empirical Dynamics of American and Japanese Trade Flows. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, January 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w3946.

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10

Sinclair, II, and Peter T. Men of Destiny: The American and Filipino Guerillas during the Japanese Occupation of the Philippines. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, December 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada558187.

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