03418ckm a2200469 i 4500 1130083105 TxAuBib 20240123120000.0 230126s2022||||||||||||||||||||||||eng|u 9781955161121 hardcover 1955161127 hardcover 9781955161176 signed 1955161178 signed (OCoLC)1360266447 TxAuBib rda Sugawara, Sandy,. Show me the way to go to home : the incarceration of 120,000 Japanese Americans / Sandy Sugawara, Catiana Garcia-Kilroy [images & text] ; texts by Donna K. Nagata, Sandy Sugawara, and Christine Kitano; foreword by Karen Korematsu. Santa Fe, NM : Radius Books, [2022] ©2022. 333 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), map ; 30 cm. sti rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier txt rdacontent rdamedia rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references. The Box / Sandy Sugawara -- Poetry -- Gaman / Christine Kitano -- Gila River / Brandon Shimoda -- Incarceration Camps -- Amache -- Topaz -- Heart Mountain -- Rohwer -- Jerome -- Manzanar -- Tule Lake -- Minidoka -- Poston -- Gila River -- Incarceree Stories -- Texts -- Foreword / Karen Korematsu -- Remarks on Signing Bill H.R. 442 August 10, 1988 / Ronald Reagan -- Intergenerational Impact of the Japanese American Incarceration / Donna Nagata -- Afterword / Catiana Garcia-Kilroy -- Plate Listing -- Contributors -- Acknowledgements. "Show Me the Way to Go to Home is an immersive, visual journey through the incarceration camps that held 120,000 Japanese Americans during World War 2. Photographers Sandy Sugawara and Catiana Garcia Kilroy tell the story of each camp through original and archival photographs, personal stories, and government documents. It's a frightening tale of a society that failed to protect its vulnerable. Each camp's story is printed on exquisite rice paper which is interwoven with dramatic landscapes. The design captures the multilayered feelings of anger, vulnerability, determination, cultural pride, and shared grief of those who lived in these camps. The book also contains an essay by Dr. Donna Nagata, Professor of Psychology at University of Michigan, who has conducted important research on the multigenerational consequences of the race-based incarceration of Japanese Americans. Today's fragile and disturbing climate of intolerance makes it all the more urgent that this period of our history not be forgotten." -- From publisher's website. 20240123. World War, 1939-1945 Concentration camps United States. World War, 1939-1945 Concentration camps United States Pictorial works. Japanese Americans History 20th century. Prisoners of war United States History 20th century. Japanese Americans Forced removal and internment, 1942-1945. Japanese Americans Forced removal and internment, 1942-1945 Pictorial works. García, Catiana,. Kitano, Christine, 1985- Shimoda, Brandon,. Korematsu, Karen,. Nagata, Donna,.