Kunisuke Hirano
Kunisuke Hirano es miembro de la Asociación de Estudios de Inmigración y estudiante de posgrado en Antropología Cultural en la Universidad de Tokio. Su interés de investigación son las minorías y la comunidad en la sociedad. Le gusta viajar, nadar, Kichijoji (un pueblo de Tokio) e irse de vacaciones.
Actualizado en noviembre de 2007
Historias de Este Autor
How Japanese Americans saw Japan: The case from Issei to Sansei in Mainland U.S.
15 de noviembre de 2007 • Kunisuke Hirano
Cultural anthropologist, Ruth Benedict stated that, “The Japanese were the most alien enemy the United States had ever fought in an all-out struggle. In no other war with a major foe had it been necessary to take into account such exceedingly different habits of acting and thinking” in Chrysanthemum and Sword published during World War?. From this phrase, we can understand how Japanese and Americans were regarded as “different” during that era. In that atmosphere, there were people who left …