Loja on-line do Museu Nacional Nipo-Americano
A premiada Loja do Museu do Museu Nacional Nipo-Americano apresenta mercadorias asiáticas-americanas distintas para todas as ocasiões e gerações. Sua linha de produtos exclusiva representa a essência da experiência nipo-americana, ao mesmo tempo que promove a apreciação da diversidade étnica e cultural da América. Todas as receitas da Loja do Museu apoiam programas e exposições do Museu.
Os artigos desta série foram escritos originalmente para a loja online do Museu Nacional Nipo-Americano [janmstore.com] para fornecer uma compreensão mais profunda dos autores, artistas e tradições apresentados na loja.
Stories from this series
Japanese American Baseball
11 de Abril de 2007 • Vicky K. Murakami-Tsuda
Baseball, the quintessential American sport, has enjoyed immense popularity in Japan, as witnessed by the country’s recent championship at the inaugural World Baseball Classic. But did you know the role Japanese Americans played as early ambassadors of the sport? The game in its modern form was invented by Alexander Cartwright in 1845. Although a pick-up style game had been played by children in North America from the mid 1700s, prior to Cartwright, there were no formalized rules of play. The …
Pure Beauty: Rebecca King-O’Riain’s Look at Japanese American Beauty Pageants
30 de Março de 2007 • Leslie Yamaguchi
Rebecca Chiyoko King-O’Riain has written a fascinating book, Pure Beauty, about Japanese American community beauty pageants, exploring how race, ethnicity, culture, and gender are linked in social practice. As revealed in her research, these beauty pageants reflect important conflicts within the Japanese American community over national citizenship, gender, and race and raise questions about the struggle to maintain racial and ethnic lines within the community. Dr. King-O’Riain has always felt a strong bond to her Japanese ancestry. Because her grandfather, …
The Extraordinary Journey of Shigeo Takayama
7 de Março de 2007 • Darryl Mori
“Now I stand in the twilight of my life,” Shigeo Takayama writes, in the introduction to his book. “It is time that I collect all the footprints on the path that I have walked these past eighty-eight years, and leave them in the form of writing.” Originally intended as a deeply personal oral history to share with his sons, who are more fluent in English than in Japanese, Takayama’s My Life: Living in Two Cultures releases a torrent of …
Hinamatsuri in the United States
2 de Março de 2007 • Susan Osa
Hinamatsuri literally translates as Doll Festival, but is often referred to as Girl’s Day. Celebrated annually on March 3, families pray for the happiness and prosperity of their girls, helping to ensure they grow up healthy and beautiful. On this day, families with young daughters celebrate this event by displaying hina-ningyo, special dolls for the occasion. The presentation of the dolls can be traced back to the Edo Era (1603-1876) when it was used as a way to ward off …
The Art of Gaman: Enduring the Seemingly Unbearable with Patience and Dignity
1 de Dezembro de 2006 • Sigrid Hudson
Looking through the pages of Delphine Hirasuna’s The Art of Gaman: Arts and Crafts from the Japanese American Internment Camps 1942-1946, one is struck by the beauty and craftsmanship of the selected pieces. However, it is more than just the aesthetic quality that shines through. It is the amazing resourcefulness and resiliency of these individuals who, out of necessity and the first idle time of their lives, created objects both utilitarian and decorative. Although most often translated as “perseverance,” Hirasuna …
Gathering of Joy: A History of Japanese American Obon Festivals and Bon Odori
8 de Julho de 2006 • Susan Osa
Obon is an annual Japanese Buddhist festival that commemorates the dead. It is based on a Buddhist text which describes how a devout monk dances with joy upon successfully releasing his deceased mother’s spirit from the Realm of Hungry Ghosts. Today, participants dance to express their joy to be living happily and to honor loved ones who have passed away. Obon is also commonly known as the Festival of Lanterns, referring to the traditional lighting of the chochin (lanterns) at …