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https://www.discovernikkei.org/pt/journal/author/spiegel-tamio/

Tamio Spiegel


Tamio Spiegel é um nova-iorquino birracial nipo-americano. Ele é um consultor independente que aconselhou empresas na Ásia e nos EUA em manufatura, desenvolvimento de produtos e comércio através do Pacífico. Ele foi diretor executivo da The Gohan Society, uma organização sem fins lucrativos com sede na cidade de Nova York que promove a comida e a cultura alimentar japonesas. Ele escreveu sobre artes e assuntos atuais para NY Nichibei , AsianWeek e Nikkei Heritage .

Atualizado em outubro de 2017


Stories from This Author

Crônicas Nikkeis n.º 6—Itadakimasu 2! Um Novo Gostinho da Cultura Nikkei
Sim, é importante: culinária nissei e identidade nipo-americana

6 de Outubro de 2017 • Tamio Spiegel

Durante anos, defendi a celebração e a codificação de uma cultura alimentar exclusivamente nipo-americana, à qual passei a me referir como “culinária nissei”. A culinária nissei é a comida exclusivamente americana que se desenvolveu como a “segunda geração” (a primeira a nascer nos EUA) de nipo-americanos, geralmente considerados aqueles nascidos entre 1915 e 1940, que atingiram a maioridade e, após a internação, mudaram-se para todo o país. os Estados Unidos, participando no desenvolvimento da grande classe média americana do pós-guerra. …

Photography and the Japanese American Memory on Exhibit at New Jersey College - Part 2

21 de Março de 2014 • Tamio Spiegel

Read Part 1 >> Kevin J. Miyazaki grew up in Wisconsin, aware that his father’s family had been interned in Tule Lake and, later, Heart Mountain. On a trip to Northern California, he found himself at a museum near the Tule Lake site where, in addition to information about the internment of Japanese Americans, he discovered that, starting in 1946, many buildings that had housed internees during the War had been offered to homesteaders to resettle the area after the …

Photography and the Japanese American Memory on Exhibit at New Jersey College - Part 1

20 de Março de 2014 • Tamio Spiegel

As Japanese Americans, we can state, without much argument, that we have a shared history.Specific events occurred over the span of time that constitute our existence as a community. We relate to our history through memory and citation. As Japanese Americans, do we have a shared, communal memory? The evacuation and incarceration of 120,000 people of Japanese descent from the West Coast during World War II is the most significant single event in our community’s history. It was massive in …

Crônicas Nikkeis n.º 2—Nikkei+: Histórias sobre Idiomas, Tradições, Gerações & Raças Miscigenadas
Japanese and Jewish Food Come Home to Brooklyn

27 de Agosto de 2013 • Tamio Spiegel

Sawako Okochi has always had a sense of adventure. When she finished high school in Hiroshima and her classmates were deciding which Japanese universities to apply to, her sights were set farther away.“Instead of going to a Japanese university, I wanted to go to an American university,” says Okochi, who had a goal of becoming a translator. “I decided to go to Texas because it was one of the cheapest places to live, and also I wanted something more in …

Pan Asian Repertory’s Plays in Progress Gives Life to “No-No Boy”

29 de Novembro de 2012 • Tamio Spiegel

Two months after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, forcing between 110,000 and 120,000 people of Japanese descent to live behind the barbed-wire fences of internment camps. In 1943 all interned Japanese Americans over the age of 17 completed the Application for Leave Clearance, commonly known as the “loyalty questionnaire,” as required by the US War Department and the War Relocation Authority (WRA). Based on the answers, the WRA determined who …

Herança Nikkei
Oshogatsu - A Japanese Tradition in America

3 de Janeiro de 2012 • Tamio Spiegel

When I met Julie, we shared a desire to keep our house open to our friends and community as much as possible. 1984 was our first oshogatsu as a couple. Her family did nishime. I had never heard of it before. I couldn’t imagine New Year’s without ozoni. Julie was obsessed with kuromame and chestnuts in a sweet sauce. What about those bowtie seaweed things? No self-respecting Japanese-American celebration is complete without cha siu, Chinese roast pork. We could do …

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