Webinars

Japanese American Citizenship in WWII: A Study in Color and Black and White

When the US government forced American citizens of Japanese ancestry from their homes and into concentration camps in 1942, it pushed them into a binary world: Were their loyalties with America or with Japan? This black-and-white model concealed the varied, vibrant colors of Japanese American identities. An extremely rare cache of candid color photographs shot behind barbed wire by Bill Manbo, a prisoner, allow us to explore both the racist sterility of the government’s understanding of citizenship and the many-hued richness of Japanese American life and resiliency in the camps.

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Webinar Leader

Eric Muller

Teacher Advisory Council Members

Vickie Johnston

Year

2022

Topics

Asset Type

Videos

Language

English

Usage Rights

External usage / Free For Use

NHC Copyrights

Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

Usage Disclaimer

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Images, PDFs, downloads, and other media are provided under the NHC Principles on Copyright, Fair Use, and Open Licensing. Visit the Principles webpage for more information on how you can use this resource.

Subject Term

Japanese Americans World War II American History Japanese Internment Camps Photography