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https://www.discovernikkei.org/ja/journal/2012/4/3/prisons-and-patriots/

Book Review: PRISONS AND PATRIOTS: Japanese American Wartime Citizenship, Civil Disobedience, and Historical Memory

Prisons and Patriots is Cherstin Lyon’s first book. Its publication catapults Professor Lyon, a historian at California State University, San Bernardino, into the ranks of the premier scholars of World War II Japanese American protest and dissent. Accordingly, this volume will now assume a place among seminal books like Roger Daniels’s Concentration Camps U.S.A. (1971), Michi Nishiura Weglyn’s Years of Infamy (1976), Richard Drinnon’s Keeper of Concentration Camps (1987), Eric Muller’s Free to Die for Their Country (2001), Frank Chin’s Born in the USA (2002); and Shirley Castlenuovo’s Soldiers of Conscience (2008), as well as such similarly consequential documentary films as Emiko Omori’s Rabbit in the Moon (1999) and Frank Abe’s Conscience and the Constitution (2000).

Prisons and Patriots originated in the “Tucsonian” Oral History Project that Lyon launched at the 1999 ceremony renaming the Tucson Federal Prison Camp as the Gordon Hirabayashi Recreation Site. During World War II this facility was a minimum-security honor camp for prisoners constructing highways in Arizona’s scenic Catalina Mountains above Tucson. In 1943 it detained Hirabayashi, a University of Washington Nisei student, Quaker, and conscientious objector who the previous year had resisted U.S. government-imposed curfew and exclusion orders on West Coast Nikkei (and then later became a draft resister). In 1944 it confined 41 other Nisei, mostly inmates from the War Relocation Authority-administered concentration camps at Topaz, Utah, and Amache, Colorado, who resisted induction without having their stripped prewar U.S. citizen rights restored.

Lyon draws upon her interviews with Hirabayashi and the other Nisei Tucsonians plus archival documentation to craft a compelling narrative. On one level, it conveys a multifaceted story about a largely neglected wartime confinement site. On a deeper level, though, it relates why and how its Nikkei denizens elected to demonstrate their patriotism via U.S. Constitution-sanctioned civil disobedience as against heeding combined federal government and Japanese American Citizens League propaganda and pressure to prove their “loyalty” through segregated military service.

The genius of Lyon’s book lies less in the stories she recounts than in her placing them into instructive and relevant contexts. The most important of them concerns the nature of citizenship. While seemingly static in “ordinary” times, notes the author, this concept in unstable times (e.g., during World War II and today’s roiled global climate) becomes “contested, variable, fluid.” Citizenship, Lyon contends, is “not simply a set of rights or obligations to be granted [but is instead]…the relationship between citizens and the state, and [it] is redefined over the life of the individual and in response to the state’s changing needs.” Building upon this insight, Lyon persuasively advances the grounded argument that over and beyond the Tucsonians, Gordon Hirabayashi, and the several hundred draft resisters within the constellation of Japanese American prison camps, the entire wartime incarcerated population of Nikkei mounted a “strong, diverse, and at times well-organized resistance” to both voluntary service and the draft.

While neither the wartime acts of individual draft resisters nor the pervasive community resistance sentiment underlying them has yet attained a popular hold on the American or Japanese American collective memory, “Prisons and Patriots” promises to provide this development with considerably greater traction. Moreover, it very likely will serve the same function for those still demonized Japanese Americans who during World War II renegotiated their U.S. citizenship rights and obligations through expatriation and renunciation.


PRISONS AND PATRIOTS: Japanese American Wartime Citizenship, Civil Disobedience, and Historical Memory
By Cherstin M. Lyon (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2012, 233 pp., $30.95, paperback)

 


* This article was originally published in the Nichi Bei Weekly on January 1, 2012.

© 2012 Arthur A. Hansen / Nichi Bei Weekly

執筆者について

アート・ハンセンはカリフォルニア州立大学フラートン校の歴史学およびアジア系アメリカ人研究の名誉教授で、2008年に同大学口述および公衆史センターの所長を退官。2001年から2005年にかけては、全米日系人博物館の上級歴史家を務めた。2018年以降、第二次世界大戦中の米国政府による不当な弾圧に対する日系アメリカ人の抵抗をテーマにした4冊の本を執筆または編集している。

2023年8月更新


日米ニュースは、歴史ある日米タイムズ(1942-2009)と日米新聞(1899-1942)の遺産から生まれ、2009年9月に米国で最初の非営利の民族コミュニティ新聞として創刊されました。歴史ある日本人街やその周辺で起きているコミュニティの問題やイベントから、エンターテイメントのプロフィール、食べ物、映画や本のレビュー、政治、ハードニュースや論評まで、日米ニュースはあらゆる情報を網羅しています。革新的な非営利団体である日米財団によって発行され、質の高いメディアを通じて約125年にわたるコミュニティリーダーシップの豊かな伝統を誇りを持って受け継いでいます。

2024年1月更新

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