ディスカバー・ニッケイ

https://www.discovernikkei.org/ja/journal/author/adachi-dean/

ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

(Dean Ryuta Adachi)

@initial_dean

ディーン・リュウタ・アダチは北カリフォルニア出身の4世と新二世のハーフです。現在はクレアモント大学院大学でアメリカ史の博士課程に在籍し、ハーベイ・マッド大学でアジア系アメリカ人研究の講師を務めています。趣味はスノーボード、柔道、読書、スポーツ観戦、日系アメリカ人コミュニティでのボランティア活動です。

2011年10月更新


この執筆者によるストーリー

日系アメリカ人の歴史を語る: JANM アーカイブの探究
Part 5 of 5 – History is Found: Sumi and Masao Shigezane

2012年5月31日 • ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

Over the previous four installments of this series, I have attempted to demonstrate many of the ongoing issues here behind-the-scenes at the Japanese American National Museum. We are fortunate to have so many priceless artifacts that help tell the remarkable history of Japanese people in the United States, but for every Namyo Bessho citizenship record, there are countless Joyce MacWilliamson radios. Furthermore, even for all properly documented items we have, it truly is beyond our ability and capacity to go …

日系アメリカ人の歴史を語る: JANM アーカイブの探究
Part 4 of 5 – History is Lost: Joyce MacWilliamson

2012年5月24日 • ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

To this point, we have examined three exceptional figures from the Japanese American community with remarkable stories and records. However, the sad truth is that for every item that we can properly describe, there are countless others that we can’t. In 1999, JANM received a curious donation offer from Ms. Joyce MacWilliamson of Beaverton, Oregon: Joyce MacWilliamson’s father Ramon “Mac” MacWilliamson took temporary ownership of a shortwave radio belonging to the 17 year old son of a Japanese American acquaintance. …

日系アメリカ人の歴史を語る: JANM アーカイブの探究
Part 3 of 5 – History is Ignored: Estelle Ishigo

2012年5月17日 • ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

Estelle Ishigo is a name that may be familiar to many of you. She was one of the few whites to be incarcerated with Japanese Americans during World War II. Estelle voluntarily chose to enter Heart Mountain Relocation Center in order to stay with her Nisei husband, Arthur Ishigo. She authored the book Lone Heart Mountain (1972) and was the subject of Steven Okazaki’s Academy Award winning film Days of Waiting (1990). While Ishigo’s artwork is highly acclaimed in Japanese …

日系アメリカ人の歴史を語る: JANM アーカイブの探究
Part 2 of 5 – History is Told: S. John Nitta

2012年5月10日 • ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

The second part of this series will tell the story of another fascinating individual with a tremendous contribution to Japanese American history. Shigeru “John” Nitta was born in Seattle in 1911, but moved to Japan as a child due to his father’s illness. He eventually returned to the United States (specifically Southern California), where he graduated from San Pedro High School in 1933. He soon moved back to Japan and studied chick sexing, which had recently been established and legitimized …

日系アメリカ人の歴史を語る: JANM アーカイブの探究
Part 1 of 5 – History is Made: Namyo Bessho

2011年12月15日 • ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

While not exclusively the case, we can simply surmise that fascinating individuals with fascinating life events make fascinating history. To appropriate Laurel Thatcher Ulrich’s famous phrase, well-behaved Japanese Americans seldom make history. From Fred Korematsu to Toyo Miyatake to Yuri Kochiyama, the Japanese Americans whose lives are memorialized in our exhibitions are primarily those who went against the grain and followed their beliefs. Although the vast heterogeneity and hybridity of Japanese Americans across three different centuries makes it difficult to …

Redefining “CAMP” In Japanese America - Part 3

2011年11月14日 • ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

Read Part 2 >>The Lasting Effects of the CampsThe camps are important not just because they are a week of enjoyment, but the impact from the week carries over for the rest of the campers lives. The newly formed friendships serve as the core to the legacy of the camp community. Since the camps are aligned with the Japanese American churches—which are the historic centers of the Japanese American community—the camps directly affect the next generation of Japanese Americans. It …

Redefining “CAMP” In Japanese America - Part 2

2011年11月7日 • ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

Read Part 1 >>United Methodist Asian American Summer CampIn 1974, Reverend Peter Chen of San Jose Japantown’s Wesley United Methodist Church and Reverend Harry Murakami of Livingston United Methodist Church created United Methodist Asian American Summer Camp (commonly referred to as Asian Camp) since the other summer camps of that era “did not meet their needs or speak to their unique experiences as ethnic minorities.” Chen also believed that “Asian-American youths could become a dynamic, powerful force within church once …

Redefining “CAMP” In Japanese America - Part 1

2011年10月31日 • ディーン・リュウタ・アダチ

On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 which led to the relocation of all 120,000 Japanese Americans living in the Western United States into internment camps. Today, historians consider this blemish in American civil rights to be the defining moment of the Japanese American community. Despite an overwhelming national distrust in their loyalty, Japanese Americans used the internment camps as a rallying point for unity and justice. This incarceration of Japanese Americans has led to …

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