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Japanese and Nikkei at Home and Abroad - Negotiating Identities in a Global World (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,646
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Japanese and Nikkei at Home and Abroad - Negotiating Identities in a Global World (Hardcover, New)
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This book is an interdisciplinary collection of essays on the
society and cultures of twenty-first century Japanese
transnationals: first-generation migrants (Issei), and their
descendants who were born and grew up outside Japan (Nikkei); and
Japanese nationals who today find themselves living overseas. The
authors-international specialists from anthropology, sociology,
history, and education-explore how individual and community
cultural identities are deeply integrated in ethnic and economic
structures, and how cultural heritage is manifested in various
Japanese transnational communities. These papers use individual
cases to tackle the bigger issues of personal identity, ethnic
community, and economic survival in an internationalized global
world. This book, then, offers new perspectives on the
anthropology, sociology, history, and economics of an important,
though largely under-reported, transnational community. While
previous studies have focused on a few specific and well-known
cases-for example, the World War II internment of Japanese
Americans and their attempts at redress, Japanese agriculture
workers in Brazil, or temporary "returnee" dekasegi workers-this
book examines Japanese transnationalism from a broader perspective,
including Japanese nationals living overseas permanently or
temporarily, and Europeans of Japanese ancestry who have recently
rediscovered their Japanese roots. Besides looking at Japanese and
Nikkei migrants in North and South America, this volume examines
some little-explored venues such as Indonesia, Spain, and Germany.
The connections among all these Japanese transnational
communities-real or imagined are explored ethnographically and
historically. And instead of simply focusing on social problems
resulting from racial discrimination-and the political actions
involved in implementing or fighting it-this volume offers more
nuanced dialogue about the issues involved with Japanese
transnationalism, in particular how ethnic identity is formed and
how Japanese transnational communities have been created, and
re-created, all over the world. Also, while until now less
attention has been paid to fitting the Japanese case into a larger
theoretical framework of globalization and migration studies, the
papers presented here-along with a detailed theoretical
introduction-attempt to rectify this.
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