Reassessing Japanese American Collective Memory Through Gene Oishi’s Internment Narratives

Seven decades after Japanese Americans were interned during the Second World War, former journalist and internment survivor Gene Oishi published Fox Drum Bebop (2014). The protagonist, Hiroshi, had been introduced in Oishi’s previous memoir, In Search of Hiroshi (1988), as “quasi-fictional” and “...

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Autor principal: Becce, Nicolangelo
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Publicado: Edizioni Ca’ Foscari 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:48a6fae9fb724a20b528baf40325eb872021-11-18T11:16:50ZReassessing Japanese American Collective Memory Through Gene Oishi’s Internment Narratives2499-156210.30687/AnnOc/2499-1562/2021/09/003https://doaj.org/article/48a6fae9fb724a20b528baf40325eb872021-09-01T00:00:00Zhttps://edizionicafoscari.unive.it4/riviste/annali-di-ca-foscari-serie-occidentale/2021/55/reassessing-japanese-american-collective-memory-th/https://doaj.org/toc/2499-1562 Seven decades after Japanese Americans were interned during the Second World War, former journalist and internment survivor Gene Oishi published Fox Drum Bebop (2014). The protagonist, Hiroshi, had been introduced in Oishi’s previous memoir, In Search of Hiroshi (1988), as “quasi-fictional” and “neither American nor Japanese, but simply me”. Yet, in the same memoir, Oishi had also described his inability to write about ‘Hiroshi’, thus settling on ‘Gene’ as a main character and waiting 28 more years before publishing a book about his true self. A comparison between the two books highlights that In Search of Hiroshi was written as an attempt at telling a story that would implicitly support the ‘model minority’ myth by offering an account of the internment experience as a direct response to the sociopolitical constraints related to the request by Japanese Americans for redress from the U.S. government. On the other hand, the more recent Fox Drum Bebop represents a fictional retelling of Oishi’s memoir which reveals the limits of the collective memory of the internment as developed during the redress years by openly defying the ‘model minority’ stereotype while at the same time once more denouncing the injustices suffered by the Japanese American community during the war. This essay focuses on Oishi’s double narrative as a reassessment of the collective memory of the internment experience and of its lasting effects on Japanese Americans. Becce, NicolangeloEdizioni Ca’ FoscariarticleJapanese American Internment. Japanese American Literature. Memory Studies. Model Minority. Gene Oishi.Language and LiteraturePLanguage. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammarP101-410DEENESFRITNLPTRUAnnali di Ca’ Foscari. Serie Occidentale, Vol 55, Iss 55, Pp - (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language DE
EN
ES
FR
IT
NL
PT
RU
topic Japanese American Internment. Japanese American Literature. Memory Studies. Model Minority. Gene Oishi.
Language and Literature
P
Language. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammar
P101-410
spellingShingle Japanese American Internment. Japanese American Literature. Memory Studies. Model Minority. Gene Oishi.
Language and Literature
P
Language. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammar
P101-410
Becce, Nicolangelo
Reassessing Japanese American Collective Memory Through Gene Oishi’s Internment Narratives
description Seven decades after Japanese Americans were interned during the Second World War, former journalist and internment survivor Gene Oishi published Fox Drum Bebop (2014). The protagonist, Hiroshi, had been introduced in Oishi’s previous memoir, In Search of Hiroshi (1988), as “quasi-fictional” and “neither American nor Japanese, but simply me”. Yet, in the same memoir, Oishi had also described his inability to write about ‘Hiroshi’, thus settling on ‘Gene’ as a main character and waiting 28 more years before publishing a book about his true self. A comparison between the two books highlights that In Search of Hiroshi was written as an attempt at telling a story that would implicitly support the ‘model minority’ myth by offering an account of the internment experience as a direct response to the sociopolitical constraints related to the request by Japanese Americans for redress from the U.S. government. On the other hand, the more recent Fox Drum Bebop represents a fictional retelling of Oishi’s memoir which reveals the limits of the collective memory of the internment as developed during the redress years by openly defying the ‘model minority’ stereotype while at the same time once more denouncing the injustices suffered by the Japanese American community during the war. This essay focuses on Oishi’s double narrative as a reassessment of the collective memory of the internment experience and of its lasting effects on Japanese Americans.
format article
author Becce, Nicolangelo
author_facet Becce, Nicolangelo
author_sort Becce, Nicolangelo
title Reassessing Japanese American Collective Memory Through Gene Oishi’s Internment Narratives
title_short Reassessing Japanese American Collective Memory Through Gene Oishi’s Internment Narratives
title_full Reassessing Japanese American Collective Memory Through Gene Oishi’s Internment Narratives
title_fullStr Reassessing Japanese American Collective Memory Through Gene Oishi’s Internment Narratives
title_full_unstemmed Reassessing Japanese American Collective Memory Through Gene Oishi’s Internment Narratives
title_sort reassessing japanese american collective memory through gene oishi’s internment narratives
publisher Edizioni Ca’ Foscari
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/48a6fae9fb724a20b528baf40325eb87
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