Stuff contributed by Greg

Parallel Wars: Japanese American and Japanese Canadian Internment Films - Part 1

Greg Robinson

This paper examines films that portray the removal and confinement of ethnic Japanese in North America during World War II (often, if imprecisely, called the Japanese internment) through the interactions between Japanese families and white characters, in order to reflect on the ways in which these films are shaped by …

"Two Other Solitudes": Historical Encounters between Japanese Canadians and French Canadians - Part 2

Greg Robinson

Part 1 >>  

"Two Other Solitudes": Historical Encounters between Japanese Canadians and French Canadians - Part 1

Greg Robinson

Les Canadiens à qui on demande en quoi leur pays se distingue des États-Unis devraient répondre en français. (When Canadians are asked what is the difference between their country and the United States, they should answer in French.) —Lester B. Pearson, Prime Minister of Canada, 1963-1968

A Tragedy of Democracy: Japanese Confinement in North America - Excerpt Part 3

Greg Robinson

>> Part 2 The policies designed by the governments of Franklin Roosevelt and Mackenzie King were arrived at independently, with no effective coordination. All the same, the two were similar in their provisions. Indeed, the Canadian experience points strongly to certain conclusions regarding events south of the border. First, military …

A Tragedy of Democracy: Japanese Confinement in North America - Excerpt Part 2

Greg Robinson

>> Part 1 As important as that initial goal is, this book has a greater purpose: to expand the contours of discussion on Japanese American confinement beyond the overly narrow framework of time and space in which the subject has been placed. First, my history goes beyond the limits of …

A Tragedy of Democracy: Japanese Confinement in North America - Excerpt Part 1

Greg Robinson

In the spring of 1942, a few months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor launched World War II in the Pacific, the United States Army, acting under authority granted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and confirmed by Congress, summarily rounded up the entire ethnic Japanese population living on the …

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About

I am a native New Yorker who is Professor of History at l'Université du Québec À Montréal, a French-language institution in Montreal, Canada. In addition to writing multiple books on Japanese American and Japanese Caandian history, I write the regular historical column "The Great Unknown" for the NICHI BEI WEEKLY newspaper.

Nikkei interests

  • community history
  • Japantowns

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