New worlds, new lives : globalization and people of Japanese descent in the Americas and from Latin America in Japan
Finna-arvio
New worlds, new lives : globalization and people of Japanese descent in the Americas and from Latin America in Japan
Tallennettuna:
Ulkoasu |
358 sivua |
---|---|
Kieli |
englanti |
Alkuteoksen kieli |
englanti |
Julkaisija |
Stanford :
Stanford University Press,
2002.
|
Sarja | Asian America |
Aiheet | |
Lisätiedot | Edited by Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Akemi Kikumura-Yano, James A. Hirabayashi |
ISBN |
0804744610 kovakantinen 0804744629 pehmeäkantinen |
Kontrolloimaton nimeke |
Globalization as human dispersal : Nikkei in the world The impact of contemporary globalization on Nikkei identities In search of the hyphen : Nikkei and the struggle over Brazilian national identity Licensed agencies for relief in Asia : relief materials and Nikkei populations in the United States and Canada An approach to the formation of Nikkei identity in Peru : Issei and Nisei The "labor pains" of forging a Nikkei community : a study of the Santa Cruz region in Bolivia "The Twain shall meet" in the Nisei? Japanese language education and U.S.-Japan relations, 1900-1940 The Nikkei's education in the Japanese language in Paraguay : the Japanese educational system and its Influence on the colonies Peruvian Nikkei : a sociopolitical portrait Pathways to power : comparative perspectives on the emergence of Nikkei ethnic political traditions I woman, I man, I Nikkei : symbolic construction of femininity and masculinity in the Japanese community of Peru Migration as a negotiation of gender : recent Japanese immigrant women in Canada Race, gender, ethnicity and the narrative of national identity in the films of Tizuka Yamazaki The Japanese-Brazilian Dekasegi phenomenon : an economic perspective The Dekasegi phenomenon and the education of Japanese Brazilian children in Japanese schools The emigration of Argentines of Japanese descent to Japan The Nikkei negotiation of minority/majority dynamics in Peru and the United States The Uchinanchu diaspora and the boundary of "Nikkei" Nikkeijin and multicultural coexistence in Japan : Kobe after the great earthquake Retrospect and prospects |