City girls

the Nisei social world in Los Angeles, 1920-1950

296 pages

English language

Published Dec. 18, 2014

ISBN:
978-0-19-975224-9
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OCLC Number:
866619941

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"Even before wartime incarceration, Japanese Americans largely lived in separate cultural communities from their West Coast neighbors. The first-generation American children, the Nisei, were American citizens, spoke English, and were integrated in public schools, yet were also socially isolated in many ways from their peers and subject to racism. Their daughters especially found rapport in a flourishing network of ethnocultural youth organizations. Until now, these groups have remained hidden from the historical record, both because they were girls' groups and because evidence of them was considered largely ephemeral. In her second book, Valerie Matsumoto has recreated this hidden world of female friendship and comradery, tracing it from the Jazz age through internment to the postwar period. Matsumoto argues that these groups were more than just social outlets for Nisei teenage girls. Rather, she shows how they were critical networks during the wartime upheavals of Japanese Americans. Young Nisei women helped …

3 editions

Subjects

  • Teenage girls
  • Japanese Americans
  • Female friendship
  • Social conditions
  • Cultural assimilation
  • Japanese American women
  • History

Places

  • Los Angeles (Calif.)
  • California
  • Los Angeles