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Wikipedia

Japanese Americans

Japanese Americans (Japanese: 日系アメリカ人) are Americans of Japanese ancestry. Japanese Americans were among the three largest Asian American ethnic communities during the 20th century; but, according to the 2000 census, they have declined in number to constitute the sixth largest Asian American group at around 1,469,637, including those of partial ancestry.[1]

Japanese Americans
日系アメリカ人
Nikkeiamerikajin
Japanese Ancestry by state
Total population
1,469,637[1]
0.44% of the total U.S. population (2019)
Regions with significant populations
Hawaii, the West Coast, especially in California, and urban areas elsewhere.
Languages
American English, Japanese
Religion
33% Protestantism
32% Unaffiliated
25% Buddhism
4% Catholicism
4% Shinto[2][3]
Related ethnic groups
Japanese people, Ryukyuan Americans

According to the 2010 census, the largest Japanese American communities were found in California with 272,528, Hawaii with 185,502, New York with 37,780, Washington with 35,008, Illinois with 17,542 and Ohio with 16,995.[4][needs update] Southern California has the largest Japanese American population in North America and the city of Gardena holds the densest Japanese American population in the 48 contiguous states.[5]

History

Immigration

 
A street in Seattle's Nihonmachi in 1909
 
Japanese Americans in Hawaii 1942

People from Japan began migrating to the US in significant numbers following the political, cultural, and social changes stemming from the Meiji Restoration in 1868. These early Issei immigrants came primarily from small towns and rural areas in the southern Japanese prefectures of Hiroshima, Yamaguchi, Kumamoto, and Fukuoka[6] and most of them settled in either Hawaii or along the West Coast. The Japanese population in the United States grew from 148 in 1880 (mostly students) to 2,039 in 1890 and 24,326 by 1900.[7]

 
Japanese American in Nyssa, Oregon, 1931

In 1907, the Gentlemen's Agreement between the governments of Japan and the United States ended immigration of Japanese unskilled workers, but permitted the immigration of businessmen, students and spouses of Japanese immigrants already in the US. Prior to the Gentlemen's Agreement, about seven out of eight ethnic Japanese in the continental United States were men. By 1924, the ratio had changed to approximately four women to every six men.[8] Japanese immigration to the U.S. effectively ended when Congress passed the Immigration Act of 1924 which banned all but a token few Japanese people. The earlier Naturalization Act of 1790 restricted naturalized United States citizenship to free white persons, which excluded the Issei from citizenship. As a result, the Issei were unable to vote and faced additional restrictions such as the inability to own land under many state laws. Due to these restrictions, Japanese immigration to the United States between 1931 and 1950 only totaled 3,503 which is strikingly low compared to the totals of 46,250 people in 1951–1960, 39,988 in 1961–70, 49,775 in 1971–80, 47,085 in 1981–90, and 67,942 in 1991–2000.[9]

Because no new immigrants from Japan were permitted after 1924, almost all pre-World War II Japanese Americans born after this time were born in the United States. This generation, the Nisei, became a distinct cohort from the Issei generation in terms of age, citizenship, and English-language ability, in addition to the usual generational differences. Institutional and interpersonal racism led many of the Nisei to marry other Nisei, resulting in a third distinct generation of Japanese Americans, the Sansei. Significant Japanese immigration did not occur again until the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 ended 40 years of bans against immigration from Japan and other countries.

In the last few decades, immigration from Japan has been more like that from Europe. The numbers involve on average 5 to 10 thousand per year, and is similar to the amount of immigration to the US from Germany. This is in stark contrast to the rest of Asia, where better opportunity of life is the primary impetus for immigration.

Internment and redress

 
Families of Japanese ancestry being removed from Los Angeles during World War II
 
Anti-Axis Committee headquarters in the Little Tokyo section of Los Angeles, 1941.

During World War II, an estimated 120,000 Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals or citizens residing on the West Coast of the United States were forcibly interned in ten different camps across the Western United States. The internment was based on the race or ancestry, rather than the activities of the interned. Families, including children, were interned together.[10] and 5,000 were able to "voluntarily" relocate outside the exclusion zone;[11]

 
Japanese American war camp in 1943 (AUG. 1943)

In 1948, the Evacuation Claims Act provided some compensation for property losses, but the act required documentation that many former inmates had lost during their removal and excluded lost opportunities, wages or interest from its calculations. Less than 24,000 filed a claim, and most received only a fraction of the losses they claimed.[12]

Four decades later, the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 officially acknowledged the "fundamental violations of the basic civil liberties and constitutional rights" of the internment.[13] Many Japanese-Americans consider the term internment camp a euphemism and prefer to refer to the forced relocation of Japanese-Americans as imprisonment in concentration camps.[14] Webster's New World Fourth College Edition defines a concentration camp: "A prison camp in which political dissidents, members of minority ethnic groups, etc. are confined."

Cultural profile

Generations

The nomenclature for each of their generations who are citizens or long-term residents of countries other than Japan, used by Japanese Americans and other nationals of Japanese descent are explained here; they are formed by combining one of the Japanese numbers corresponding to the generation with the Japanese word for generation (sei 世). The Japanese American communities have themselves distinguished their members with terms like Issei, Nisei, and Sansei, which describe the first, second, and third generations of immigrants. The fourth generation is called Yonsei (四世), and the fifth is called Gosei (五世). The term Nikkei (日系) encompasses Japanese immigrants in all countries and of all generations.

Generation Summary
Issei (一世) The generation of people born in Japan who later immigrated to another country.
Nisei (二世) The generation of people born in North America, Latin America, Hawaii, or any country outside Japan either to at least one Issei or one non-immigrant Japanese parent.
Sansei (三世) The generation of people born in North America, Latin America, Hawaii, or any country outside Japan to at least one Nisei parent.
Yonsei (四世) The generation of people born in North America, Latin America, Hawaii, or any country outside Japan to at least one Sansei parent.
Gosei (五世) The generation of people born in North America, Latin America, Hawaii, or any country outside Japan to at least one Yonsei parent.

The kanreki (還暦), a pre-modern Japanese rite of passage to old age at 60, is now being celebrated by increasing numbers of Japanese American Nisei. Rituals are enactments of shared meanings, norms, and values; and this traditional Japanese rite of passage highlights a collective response among the Nisei to the conventional dilemmas of growing older.[15]

Languages

Issei and many nisei speak Japanese in addition to English as a second language. In general, later generations of Japanese Americans speak English as their first language, though some do learn Japanese later as a second language. In Hawaii however, where Nikkei are about one-fifth of the whole population, Japanese is a major language, spoken and studied by many of the state's residents across ethnicities.[citation needed] It is taught in private Japanese language schools as early as the second grade. As a courtesy to the large number of Japanese tourists (from Japan), Japanese characters are provided on place signs, public transportation, and civic facilities. The Hawaii media market has a few locally produced Japanese language newspapers and magazines, although these are on the verge of dying out, due to a lack of interest on the part of the local (Hawaii-born) Japanese population. Stores that cater to the tourist industry often have Japanese-speaking personnel. To show their allegiance to the US, many nisei and sansei intentionally avoided learning Japanese. But as many of the later generations find their identities in both Japan and America or American society broadens its definition of cultural identity, studying Japanese is becoming more popular than it once was.[citation needed]

Education

 
Japanese American in Oregon

Japanese American culture places great value on education and culture. Across generations, children are often instilled with a strong desire to enter the rigors of higher education. Math and reading scores on the SAT and ACT may often exceed the national averages. Japanese Americans have the largest showing of any ethnic group in nationwide Advanced Placement testing each year.[citation needed]

A large majority of Japanese Americans obtain post-secondary degrees and are often confronted with the "model minority" stereotype, a characterization that first gained media attention during the 1960s. Among its earlier proponents, sociologist William Petersen, writing in 1966 on Japanese American success, stated that "They have established this remarkable record, moreover, by their own almost totally unaided effort. Every attempt to hamper their progress resulted only in enhancing their determination to succeed."[16]

Although their numbers have declined slightly in recent years, Japanese Americans are still a prominent presence in Ivy League schools, the top University of California campuses including Berkeley and UCLA, and other elite universities.[citation needed] The 2000 census reported that 40.8% of Japanese Americans held a college degree.[17]

Schools for Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals

 
Nihon Go Gakko in Seattle

A Japanese school opened in Hawaii in 1893 and other Japanese schools for temporary settlers in North America followed.[18] In the years prior to World War II, many second generation Japanese American attended the American school by day and the Japanese school in the evening to keep up their Japanese skill as well as English. Other first generation Japanese American parents were worried that their child might go through the same discrimination when going to school so they gave them the choice to either go back to Japan to be educated, or to stay in America with their parents and study both languages.[19][page needed] Anti-Japanese sentiment during World War I resulted in public efforts to close Japanese-language schools. The 1927 Supreme Court case Farrington v. Tokushige protected the Japanese American community's right to have Japanese language private institutions. During the internment of Japanese Americans in World War II many Japanese schools were closed. After the war many Japanese schools reopened.[20]

There are primary school-junior high school Japanese international schools within the United States. Some are classified as nihonjin gakkō or Japanese international schools operated by Japanese associations,[21] and some are classified as Shiritsu zaigai kyōiku shisetsu (私立在外教育施設) or overseas branches of Japanese private schools.[22] They are: Seigakuin Atlanta International School, Chicago Futabakai Japanese School, Japanese School of Guam, Nishiyamato Academy of California near Los Angeles, Japanese School of New Jersey, and New York Japanese School. A boarding senior high school, Keio Academy of New York, is near New York City. It is a Shiritsu zaigai kyōiku shisetsu.[22]

There are also supplementary Japanese educational institutions (hoshū jugyō kō) that hold Japanese classes on weekends. They are located in several US cities.[23] The supplementary schools target Japanese nationals and second-generation Japanese Americans living in the United States. There are also Japanese heritage schools for third generation and beyond Japanese Americans.[24] Rachel Endo of Hamline University,[25] the author of "Realities, Rewards, and Risks of Heritage-Language Education: Perspectives from Japanese Immigrant Parents in a Midwestern Community," wrote that the heritage schools "generally emphasize learning about Japanese American historical experiences and Japanese culture in more loosely defined terms".[26]

Tennessee Meiji Gakuin High School (shiritsu zaigai kyōiku shisetsu) and International Bilingual School (unapproved by the Japanese Ministry of Education or MEXT) were full-time Japanese schools that were formerly in existence.

Religion

Religious Makeup of Japanese-Americans (2012)[27]

  Christianity (37%)
  Unaffiliated (32%)
  Buddhism (25%)
  Shintoism and Other (6%)

Japanese Americans practice a wide range of religions, including Mahayana Buddhism (Jōdo Shinshū, Jōdo-shū, Nichiren, Shingon, and Zen forms being most prominent) their majority faith, Shinto, and Christianity (usually Protestant or Catholic). In many ways, due to the longstanding nature of Buddhist and Shinto practices in Japanese society, many of the cultural values and traditions commonly associated with Japanese tradition have been strongly influenced by these religious forms.

 
San Jose Betsuin Buddhist Temple

A large number of the Japanese American community continue to practice Buddhism in some form, and a number of community traditions and festivals continue to center around Buddhist institutions. For example, one of the most popular community festivals is the annual Obon Festival, which occurs in the summer, and provides an opportunity to reconnect with their customs and traditions and to pass these traditions and customs to the young. These kinds of festivals are mostly popular in communities with large populations of Japanese Americans, such as Southern California and Hawaii. A reasonable number of Japanese people both in and out of Japan are secular, as Shinto and Buddhism are most often practiced by rituals such as marriages or funerals, and not through faithful worship, as defines religion for many Americans.

Many Japanese Americans also practice Christianity. Among mainline denominations the Presbyterians have long been active. The First Japanese Presbyterian Church of San Francisco opened in 1885.[28] Los Angeles Holiness Church was founded by six Japanese men and women in 1921.[29] There is also the Japanese Evangelical Missionary Society (JEMS) formed in the 1950s. It operates Asian American Christian Fellowships (AACF) programs on university campuses, especially in California.[30] The Japanese language ministries are fondly known as "Nichigo" in Japanese American Christian communities. The newest trend includes Asian American members who do not have a Japanese heritage.[31]

Celebrations

An important annual festival for Japanese Americans is the Obon Festival, which happens in July or August of each year. Across the country, Japanese Americans gather on fair grounds, churches and large civic parking lots and commemorate the memory of their ancestors and their families through folk dances and food. Carnival booths are usually set up so Japanese American children have the opportunity to play together.

Japanese American celebrations tend to be more sectarian in nature and focus on the community-sharing aspects.

 
A nebuta float during Nisei Week in Los Angeles
 
Kazari streamers hung during the Tanabata festival in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo
 
Bon Odori in Seattle
 
A kagami mochi display for the upcoming Japanese New Year in San Diego's Nijiya Market
Major celebrations in the United States
Date Name Region
January 1 Shōgatsu New Year's Celebration Nationwide
February Japanese Heritage Fair Honolulu, HI
February to March Cherry Blossom Festival Honolulu, HI
March 3 Hinamatsuri (Girls' Day) Hawaii
March Honolulu Festival Honolulu, HI
March Hawaiʻi International Taiko Festival Honolulu, HI
March International Cherry Blossom Festival Macon, GA
March to April National Cherry Blossom Festival Washington, DC
April Northern California Cherry Blossom Festival San Francisco, CA
April Pasadena Cherry Blossom Festival Pasadena, CA
April Seattle Cherry Blossom Festival Seattle, WA
May 5 Tango no Sekku (Boys' Day) Hawaii
May Shinnyo-En Toro-Nagashi (Memorial Day Floating Lantern Ceremony) Honolulu, HI
June Pan-Pacific Festival Matsuri in Hawaiʻi Honolulu, HI
July 7 Tanabata (Star Festival) Nationwide
July–August Obon Festival Nationwide
August Nihonmachi Street Fair San Francisco, CA
August Nisei Week Los Angeles, CA

Politics

 
Patsy Mink entered the U.S. House of Representatives in 1965 as the first woman of color in either chamber of Congress.

Japanese Americans have shown strong support for Democratic candidates in recent elections. Shortly prior to the 2004 US presidential election, Japanese Americans narrowly favored Democrat John Kerry by a 42% to 38% margin over Republican George W. Bush.[32] In the 2008 US presidential election, the National Asian American Survey found that Japanese Americans favored Democrat Barack Obama by a 62% to 16% margin over Republican John McCain, while 22% were still undecided.[33] In the 2012 presidential election, a majority of Japanese Americans (70%) voted for Barack Obama.[34] In the 2016 presidential election, majority of Japanese Americans (74%) voted for Hillary Clinton.[35] In pre-election surveys for the 2020 presidential election, 61% to 72% of Japanese Americans planned to vote for Joe Biden.[36][37]

Genetics

Risk for inherited diseases

Studies have looked into the risk factors that are more prone to Japanese Americans, specifically in hundreds of family generations of Nisei (The generation of people born in North America, Latin America, Hawaii, or any country outside Japan either to at least one Issei or one non-immigrant Japanese parent) second-generation pro-bands (A person serving as the starting point for the genetic study of a family, used in medicine and psychiatry). The risk factors for genetic diseases in Japanese Americans include coronary heart disease and diabetes. One study, called the Japanese American Community Diabetes Study that started in 1994 and went through 2003, involved the pro-bands taking part to test whether the increased risk of diabetes among Japanese Americans is due to the effects of Japanese Americans having a more westernized lifestyle due to the many differences between the United States of America and Japan. One of the main goals of the study was to create an archive of DNA samples which could be used to identify which diseases are more susceptible in Japanese Americans.

Concerns with these studies of the risks of inherited diseases in Japanese Americans is that information pertaining to the genetic relationship may not be consistent with the reported biological family information given of Nisei second generation pro-bands.[38] Also, research has been put on concerning apolipoprotein E genotypes; this polymorphism has three alleles (*e2, *e3, and *e4)and was determined from research because of its known association with increased cholesterol levels and risk of coronary heart disease in Japanese Americans. Specifically too, the apolipoprotein *e4 allele is linked to Alzheimer's disease as well. Also, there is increased coronary heart disease in Japanese-American men with a mutation in the cholesterol ester transfer protein gene despite having increased levels of HDL. By definition, HDL are plasma high density lipoproteins that show a genetic relationship with coronary heart disease (CHD). The cholesterol ester transfer protein(CETP) helps the transfer of cholesterol esters from lipoproteins to other lipoproteins in the human body. It plays a fundamental role in the reverse transport of cholesterol to the liver, which is why a mutation in this can lead to coronary heart disease.

Studies have shown that the CETP is linked to increased HDL levels. There is a very common pattern of two different cholesterol ester transfer protein gene mutations (D442G, 5.1%; intron 14G:A, 0.5%) found in about 3,469 Japanese American men. This was based on a program called the Honolulu Heart Program. The mutations correlated with decreased CETP levels (-35%) and increased HDL cholesterol levels (+10% for D442G). The relative risk of CHD was 1.43 in men with mutations (P<0.05), and after research found for CHD risk factors, the relative risk went up to 1.55 (P=0.02); after further adjustments for HDL levels, the relative risk went up again to 1.68 (P=0.008). Genetic CETP deficiency is an independent risk factor for coronary heart disease, which is due mainly to increased CHD risks in Japanese American men with the D442G mutation and lipoprotein cholesterol levels between 41 and 60 mg/dl.[39] With research and investigations, the possibility of finding "bad genes" denounces the Japanese Americans and will be associated only with Japanese American ancestry, leading to other issues the Japanese Americans had to deal with in the past such as discrimination and prejudice.[40]

Japanese Americans by state

Alaska

California

In the early 1900s, Japanese Americans established fishing communities on Terminal Island and in San Diego.[41] By 1923, there were two thousand Japanese fishermen sailing out of Los Angeles Harbor.[42] By the 1930s, legislation was passed that attempted to limit Japanese fishermen. Still, areas like San Francisco's Japantown managed to thrive.

Due to the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, historically Japanese areas fell into disrepair or became adopted by other minority groups (in the case of Black and Latino populations in Little Tokyo). Boats owned by Japanese Americans were confiscated by the U.S. Navy.[43] One of the vessels owned by a Japanese American, the Alert, built in 1930,[44] became YP-264 in December 1941,[41] and was finally struck from the Naval Vessel Register in 2014.[45] When Japanese Americans returned from internment, many settled in neighborhoods where they set up their own community centers in order to feel accepted. Today, many have been renamed cultural centers and focus on the sharing of Japanese culture with local community members, especially in the sponsorship of Obon festivals.[46]

The city of Torrance in Greater Los Angeles has headquarters of Japanese automakers and offices of other Japanese companies. Because of the abundance of Japanese restaurants and other cultural offerings are in the city, and Willy Blackmore of L.A. Weekly wrote that Torrance was "essentially Japan's 48th prefecture".[47]

Connecticut

Two supplementary Japanese language schools are located in Connecticut, each educating the local Japanese population. The Japanese School of New York is located in Greenwich, Connecticut in Greater New York City; it had formerly been located in New York City. There is also the Japanese Language School of Greater Hartford, located in Hartford, Connecticut.

Georgia

The Seigakuin Atlanta International School is located in Peachtree Corners in Greater Atlanta.

Hawaii

Illinois

As of 2011 there is a Japanese community in Arlington Heights, near Chicago. Jay Shimotake, the president of the Mid America Japanese Club, an organization located in Arlington Heights, said "Arlington Heights is a very convenient location, and Japanese people in the business environment know it's a nice location surrounding O'Hare airport."[48] The Chicago Futabakai Japanese School is located in Arlington Heights. The Mitsuwa Marketplace, a shopping center owned by Japanese, opened around 1981. Many Japanese companies have their US headquarters in nearby Hoffman Estates and Schaumburg.[48]

Massachusetts

There is a Japanese School of Language in Medford.[49] Another, the Amherst Japanese Language School, is in South Hadley, in the 5-college area of the western part of the state.[50]Most Japanese-Americans in the state live in Greater Boston, with a high concentration in the town of Brookline.

Porter Square, Cambridge has a Japanese-cultural district and shopping plaza.

Michigan

As of April 2013, the largest Japanese national population in Michigan is in Novi, with 2,666 Japanese residents, and the next largest populations are respectively in Ann Arbor, West Bloomfield Township, Farmington Hills, and Battle Creek. The state has 481 Japanese employment facilities providing 35,554 local jobs. 391 of them are in Southeast Michigan, providing 20,816 jobs, and the 90 in other regions in the state provide 14,738 jobs. The Japanese Direct Investment Survey of the Consulate-General of Japan, Detroit stated that over 2,208 more Japanese residents were employed in the State of Michigan as of October 1, 2012, than had been in 2011.[51]

New Jersey

As of March 2011 about 2,500 Japanese Americans combined live in Edgewater and Fort Lee; this is the largest concentration of Japanese Americans in the state.[52] The New Jersey Japanese School is located in Oakland. Paramus Catholic High School hosts a weekend Japanese school, and Englewood Cliffs has a Japanese school. Other smaller Japanese American populations are also located in the remainder of Bergen County and other parts of the state. Mitsuwa Marketplace has a location in Edgewater that also houses a mini shopping complex.[53]

New York

Oregon

Rhode Island

Rhode Island is the only state celebrating Victory Over Japan Day (V-J Day) as a holiday. Every year, the holiday is observed on the second Monday in August. It has been claimed that this holiday is racially-based and negatively affects Japanese American citizens in RI and other states in the U.S., ignoring traumas caused by the history of the internment camp and deaths of between 129,000 and 226,000 civilians and lasting radiation poisoning due to the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It is reported that in Rhode Island, some Japanese "are uncomfortable leaving their homes on Victory Day because they fear violence."[54]

Virginia

There are about 5,500 Japanese Americans in Northern Virginia, representing the majority of Japanese Americans in the state and the multi-state Baltimore-Washington metropolitan area. A small, but relatively high number of Japanese Americans can be found areas surrounding the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech.

Washington

Neighborhoods and communities

 
Little Tokyo Village in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo
 
Miyako Mall in San Francisco's Japantown
 
Uwajimaya Village in Seattle

West

Outside the West

In the Southern, Midwestern, and Northeastern United States, the New York metropolitan area has the highest number of Japanese Americans, followed by the Washington metropolitan area.[58]

Notable people

Politics

 
Senator Inouye of Hawaii was named the President pro tempore of the United States Senate in 2010, becoming the highest ranking Asian American in congressional history.

After the Territory of Hawaiʻi's statehood in 1959, Japanese American political empowerment took a step forward with the election of Daniel K. Inouye to Congress. Spark Matsunaga was elected to the US House of Representatives in 1963, and in 1965, Patsy Mink became the first Asian American woman elected to the United States Congress. Inouye, Matsunaga, and Mink's success led to the gradual acceptance of Japanese American leadership on the national stage. Federal level appointments include Eric Shinseki and Norman Y. Mineta, the first Japanese American military chief of staff and federal cabinet secretary, respectively.

As an expansion of immigration continued in 1920, more restrictions on women were put in place.This also came with the push for more Single women to act as continental brides and come to the United States and more to raise up strong Japanese communities by marrying Japanese settlers who lived there. This push also called for women to be trained to  best server the household needs, husband and mostly the empire.[60]

Japanese American members of the United States House of Representatives have included Daniel K. Inouye, Spark Matsunaga, Patsy Mink, Norman Mineta, Bob Matsui, Pat Saiki, Mike Honda, Doris Matsui, Mazie Hirono, Mark Takano, Mark Takai, and Jill Tokuda.

Japanese American members of the United States Senate have included Daniel K. Inouye, Samuel I. Hayakawa, Spark Matsunaga, and Mazie Hirono. In 2010, Inouye was sworn in as President pro tempore of the United States Senate making him the highest-ranking Asian-American politician in American history up to that time.

George Ariyoshi served as the Governor of Hawaiʻi from 1974 to 1986. He was the first American of Asian descent to be elected governor of a state of the United States. David Ige was the governor of Hawaii from 2014 2022.

Kinjiro Matsudaira was elected mayor of Edmonston, Maryland in 1927 and 1943.[61] In 1957, Japanese American James Kanno was elected as the first mayor of California's Fountain Valley.[62] Norm Mineta became mayor of San Jose, California in 1971.[63] In 1980, Eunice Sato became the first Asian-American female mayor of a major American city when she was elected mayor of Long Beach, California.[64]

Science and technology

 
Yoichiro Nambu, the 2008 Nobel Laureate in Physics

Many Japanese Americans have also gained prominence in science and technology. In 1979, biochemist Harvey Itano became the first Japanese American elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences.

Charles J. Pedersen won the 1987 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his methods of synthesizing crown ethers. Yoichiro Nambu won the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on quantum chromodynamics and spontaneous symmetry breaking. Shuji Nakamura won the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physics for the invention of efficient blue light-emitting diodes. Syukuro Manabe won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics for his contributions to the "physical modeling of earth's climate, quantifying variability and reliably predicting global warming."

Michio Kaku is a theoretical physicist specializing in string field theory, and a well-known science popularizer. Ellison Onizuka became the first Asian American astronaut and was the mission specialist aboard Challenger at the time of its explosion. Immunologist Santa J. Ono became the first Japanese American president of a major research university (the University of Cincinnati). Ono subsequently served as president of the University of British Columbia and University of Michigan.

Bell M. Shimada was a notable fisheries scientist of the 1950s after whom the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research ship NOAAS Bell M. Shimada (R 227) and the Shimada Seamount in the Pacific Ocean were named.[65][66]

In 2018, Lauren Kiyomi Williams became the second ever tenured female mathematician of the Harvard mathematics department.

Art and literature

Art and architecture

Artist Sueo Serisawa helped establish the California Impressionist style of painting. Yoko Ono's Fluxus art and performance art has been exhibited internationally. Other influential Japanese American artists include Chiura Obata, Isamu Noguchi, Kenjiro Nomura, George Tsutakawa, George Nakashima, Hideo Noda, and Ruth Asawa.

Architect Minoru Yamasaki designed the original World Trade Center (completed in 1973) and several other large-scale projects. Gyo Obata designed the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C (completed in 1976) and the pavilion of the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles (completed in 1992).

Literature

 
1984 American Book Award winner Miné Okubo

Japanese American recipients of the American Book Award include Milton Murayama (1980), Ronald Phillip Tanaka (1982), Miné Okubo (1984), Keiho Soga (1985), Taisanboku Mori (1985), Sojin Takei (1985), Muin Ozaki (1985), Toshio Mori (1986), William Minoru Hohri (1989), Sesshu Foster (1990 and 2010), Karen Tei Yamashita (1991 and 2011), Sheila Hamanaka (1992), Lawson Fusao Inada (1994), Ronald Takaki (1994), Kimiko Hahn (1996), Lois-Ann Yamanaka (2000), Ruth Ozeki (2004), Hiroshi Kashiwagi (2005), Yuko Taniguchi (2008), and Frank Abe (2019). Hisaye Yamamoto received an American Book Award for Lifetime Achievement in 1986.

Taro Yashima won the Children's Book Award in 1955 for his book Crow Boy. Cynthia Kadohata won the Newbery Medal in 2005 and National Book Award for Young People's Literature in 2013.

Michi Weglyn and Ronald Takaki received the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award in 1977 and 1994 respectively.

Dale Furutani won the Anthony Award and the Macavity Award in 1997.

Poet laureate of San Francisco (from 2000 to 2002) Janice Mirikitani published three volumes of poems. Lawson Fusao Inada was named poet laureate of the state of Oregon (2006–2010).

Tomie Arai's work is part of permanent collection of Museum of Modern Art, Library of Congress, and the Museum of Chinese in the Americas.

Michiko Kakutani is an American Pulitzer Prize-winning literary critic and former chief book critic for The New York Times (from 1983 to 2017).

Karen Tei Yamashita was named the recipient of the National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters in 2021.

Music

 
Midori Goto in 2013

Classical violinist Midori Gotō is a recipient of the prestigious Avery Fisher Prize (2001), while world-renowned violinist Anne Akiko Meyers received an Avery Fisher career grant in 1993. Juno Award-nominated classical violinist Hidetaro Suzuki was the concertmaster of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra from 1978 to 2005. Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter Yoko Ono released 14 studio albums and was named the 11th most successful dance club artist of all time by Billboard Magazine.

Other notable Japanese American musicians include singer, actress and Broadway star Pat Suzuki; rapper Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park and Fort Minor; rapper Kikuo Nishi aka "KeyKool" of The Visionaries; Hiro Yamamoto, original bassist of Soundgarden; ukulele player Jake Shimabukuro; guitarist James Iha of The Smashing Pumpkins fame; singer-songwriter Rachael Yamagata; bilingual singer-songwriter Emi Meyer; and Trivium lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Matt Heafy. Marc Okubo, guitarist of Veil of Maya, is of Japanese descent.

Singer-songwriter and composer Mari Iijima is a Japanese expat currently living in the United States. J-Pop singers Hikaru Utada and Joe Inoue were both born in the United States but gained their fame in Japan.

Sports

 
1952 gold medalist Ford Konno

Japanese Americans first made an impact in Olympic sports in the late 1940s and in the 1950s. Harold Sakata won a weightlifting silver medal in the 1948 Olympics, while Japanese Americans Tommy Kono (weightlifting), Yoshinobu Oyakawa (100-meter backstroke), and Ford Konno (1500-meter freestyle) each won gold and set Olympic records in the 1952 Olympics. Also at the 1952 Olympics, Evelyn Kawamoto won two bronze medals in swimming. Konno won another gold and silver swimming medal at the same Olympics and added a silver medal in 1956, while Kono set another Olympic weightlifting record in 1956.

Several decades later, Eric Sato won gold (1988) and bronze (1992) medals in volleyball, while his sister Liane Sato won bronze in the same sport in 1992. Bryan Clay (mother from Japan) won the decathlon gold medal in the 2008 Olympics, the silver medal in the 2004 Olympics, and was the sport's 2005 world champion. Apolo Anton Ohno (father from Japan) won eight Olympic medals in short-track speed skating (two gold) in 2002, 2006, and 2010, as well as a world cup championship. Brothers Kawika and Erik Shoji won bronze medals in volleyball in 2016.

Michael Norman (mother from Japan) was a member of the gold medal-winning 4 × 400 meters relay at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, and won an individual gold medal in the 400 meter race at the 2022 World Athletics Championships. Swimmers Erica Sullivan and Jay Litherland (both with mothers from Japan) each won silver medals at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

In figure skating, Kristi Yamaguchi, a fourth-generation Japanese American, won three national championship titles (one in singles, two in pairs), two world titles, and the 1992 Olympic gold medal in singles figure skating. Rena Inoue, a Japanese immigrant to America who later became a US citizen, competed at the 2006 Olympics in pair skating for the United States. Kyoko Ina, who was born in Japan, but raised in the United States, competed for the United States in singles and pairs, and was a multiple national champion and an Olympian with two different partners. Two-time Olympian Mirai Nagasu won the 2008 U.S. Figure Skating Championships at the age of 14, becoming the second youngest woman to ever win that title. Alex and Maia Shibutani are two-time national champions in ice dancing and 2018 Olympic bronze medalists.

In distance running, Miki (Michiko) Gorman won the Boston and New York City marathons twice in the 1970s. A former American record holder at the distance, she is the only woman to win both races twice, and is one of only two women to win both marathons in the same year.

In professional sports, Nisei-born Wataru Misaka made the New York Knicks roster in 1947 as the first person of color to play in modern professional basketball, just months after Jackie Robinson had broken the color barrier in Major League Baseball for the Brooklyn Dodgers.[67] Misaka played college basketball for the Utah Utes and led the team to win the 1944 NCAA and 1947 NIT championships. He took a two-year hiatus between these titles to serve in the United States Army in the American occupation of Japan.[68][69]

Wally Kaname Yonamine was a professional running back for the San Francisco 49ers in 1947. Lenn Sakata, born in Hawaii, played in the MLB from 1977 to 1987. Rex Walters, whose mother was Japanese, played in the NBA from 1993 to 2000. Lindsey Yamasaki was the first Asian American to play in the WNBA and finished off her NCAA career with the third-most career 3-pointers at Stanford University.

Hikaru Nakamura became the youngest American ever to earn the titles of National Master (age 10) and International Grandmaster (age 15) in chess. In 2004, at the age of 16, he won the U.S. Chess Championship for the first time. He later won four other times.

Collin Morikawa won golf's 2020 PGA Championship and 2021 Open Championship.

Naomi Osaka, who held U.S. citizenship until she renounced it in 2019,[70] was the main torchbearer of the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.[71] Osaka resides in the United States.[72]

Kyle Larson, born to an American father and Japanese-American mother, won the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series.

Entertainment and media

 
1957 Academy Award winner Miyoshi Umeki

Miyoshi Umeki won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in 1957. Actors Sessue Hayakawa, Mako Iwamatsu, and Pat Morita were nominated for Academy Awards in 1957, 1966, and 1984 respectively.

Steven Okazaki won the 1990 Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject) for his film Days of Waiting: The Life & Art of Estelle Ishigo. Chris Tashima won the 1997 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film. Audrey Marrs won the 2010 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Kazu Hiro won the Academy Award for Best Makeup and Hairstyling in 2018 and 2020, winning the second award as an American citizen.

Jack Soo, born Goro Suzuki, (Valentine's Day and Barney Miller), George Takei (Star Trek fame) and Pat Morita (Happy Days and The Karate Kid) helped pioneer acting roles for Asian Americans while playing secondary roles on the small screen during the 1960s and 1970s. In 1976, Morita also starred in Mr. T and Tina, the first American sitcom centered on a person of Asian descent. Keiko Yoshida appeared on the 1999–2005 TV show ZOOM on PBS Kids. Gregg Araki (director of independent films) is also Japanese American.

Shin Koyamada had a leading role in the Warner Bros. epic movie The Last Samurai and Disney Channel movie franchise Wendy Wu: Homecoming Warrior and TV series Disney Channel Games. Masi Oka played a prominent role in the NBC series Heroes, Grant Imahara appeared on the Discovery Channel series MythBusters and Derek Mio appeared in the NBC series Day One. Daisuke Tsuji played the Crown Prince in the Amazon original series The Man in the High Castle and as the voice and motion-capture of the main protagonist Jin Sakai in the 2020 video game Ghost of Tsushima.

Cary Fukunaga is an Emmy-award-winning filmmaker and writer known for directing and producing the first season of HBO series True Detective and for directing the 2021 James Bond film No Time to Die.

Karen Fukuhara grew up speaking Japanese as her first language and attended Japanese language schools on Saturdays for 11 years. She got her start in the entertainment industry as a host for Disney Channel's Movie Surfers before she made her film debut in 2016's Suicide Squad as Tatsu Yamashiro / Katana. Fukuhara has since lent her talent to live-action and animated shows such as The Boys, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power and Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts.

Japanese Americans now anchor TV newscasts in markets all over the country. Notable anchors include Tritia Toyota, Adele Arakawa, David Ono, Kent Ninomiya, Lori Matsukawa, and .[73]

Works about Japanese Americans

  • In 2010 TBS produced a five-part, ten-hour fictional Japanese language miniseries, Japanese Americans. This featured many of the major events and themes of the Issei and Nisei experience, including emigration, racism, picture brides, farming, pressure due to the China and Pacific wars, internment, a key character who serves in the 442nd, and the ongoing redefinition in identity of what it means to be Japanese and American.[74]

See also

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Further reading

  • "Present-Day Immigration with Special Reference to the Japanese," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (Jan 1921), pp. 1–232 online August 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine 24 articles by experts, mostly about California
  • Azuma, Eiichiro. "A History of Oregon's Issei, 1880–1952 November 4, 2015, at the Wayback Machine." Oregon Historical Quarterly. Oregon Historical Society. Vol. 94, No. 4, Winter, 1993/1994., pp. 315–367. Available on JStor.
  • DeWan, George. "Learning How To Stay Japanese In America." Newsday. January 6, 1990. PART 11, Start page NOPGCIT.
  • Easton, Stanley E., and Lucien Ellington. "Japanese Americans." in Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 2, Gale, 2014), pp. 537–555. online March 26, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • Hosokawa, Bill (1969). Nisei: the Quiet Americans. New York: William Morrow & Company. ISBN 978-0-688-05013-9.
  • Inouye, Karen M., "Changing History: Competing Notions of Japanese American Experience, 1942–2006" (PhD dissertation Brown University, 2008). Dissertation Abstracts International No. DA3318331.
  • Jacobson, Matthew Frye. (2000). Barbarian Virtues: The United States Encounters Foreign Peoples at Home and Abroad, 1876–1917. Hill and Wang, ISBN 978-0-8090-1628-0
  • Kase, Toyoshi. "Nisei Samurai: Culture and Agency in Three Japanese American Lives." (PhD dissertation 2005). online March 2, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  • Kikumura-Yano, Akemi, ed. "Encyclopedia of Japanese Descendants in the Americas." (Walnut Creek, CA: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002).
  • Leong, Andrew Way. "Early Japanese American Literature, 1815–1900." in Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature (2019). online[dead link]
  • Lyman, Stanford M. Chinatown and Little Tokyo: Power, Conflict, and Community Among Chinese and Japanese Immigrants in America (Associated Faculty Press, 1986).
  • Miyakawa, Tetsuo Scott. East across the Pacific: historical & sociological studies of Japanese immigration & assimilation (ABC-CLIO, 1972).
  • Montero, Darrel. Japanese Americans: Changing Patterns of Ethnic Affiliation Over Three Generations (Westview Press, 1980).
  • Moulin, Pierre. (1993). U.S. Samurais in Bruyeres – People of France and Japanese Americans: Incredible story Hawaii CPL Editions. ISBN 2-9599984-0-5
  • Moulin, Pierre. (2007). Dachau, Holocaust and US Samurais – Nisei Soldiers first in Dachau Authorhouse Editions. ISBN 978-1-4259-3801-7
  • Nakano, Mei T. Japanese American Women: Three Generations 1890–1990 (Mina Press, 1990).
  • Niiya, Brian, ed. Encyclopedia of Japanese American History: An A-to-Z Reference from 1868 to the Present. (2001). online free to borrow
  • Takahashi, Jere. Nisei/Sansei: Shifting Japanese American Identities and Politics (Temple University Press, 1997).
  • Thernstrom, Stephan; Orlov, Ann; Handlin, Oscar (1980). "Japanese". Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups (2 ed.). Harvard University Press. pp. 561–562. ISBN 0-674-37512-2.
  • Tsuchiya, Tomoko, "Interracial Marriages between American Soldiers and Japanese Women at the Beginning of the Cold War," Journal of American and Canadian Studies (Tokyo) (no. 29, 2011), 59–84
  • "United States Census 2000". United States Census Bureau. April 2000. from the original on July 30, 2017. Retrieved March 16, 2007.

In Hawaii

  • Asato, Noriko (September 2005). Teaching Mikadoism: The Attack on Japanese Language Schools in Hawaii, California, and Washington, 1919–1927. Honolulu: University of Hawaii.
  • Kono, Hideto; Sinoto, Kazuko (2000). "Observations of the first Japanese to Land in Hawai'i" (PDF). The Hawaiian Journal of History. 34: 49–62. (PDF) from the original on March 14, 2017. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  • Kawakami, Barbara F. Japanese immigrant clothing in Hawaii, 1885–1941 (University of Hawaii Press, 1995).
  • Morgan, William. Pacific Gibraltar: U.S.-Japanese Rivalry over the Annexation of Hawai'i, 1885–1898 (Naval Institute Press, 2011).
  • Morimoto, Toyotomi (1997). Japanese Americans and Cultural Continuity: Maintaining Language through Heritage. Routledge.
  • Nordyke, Eleanor C., and Y. Scott Matsumoto. "Japanese in Hawaii: a Historical and Demographic Perspective." (1977). online February 28, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  • Takagi, Mariko (1987). Moral Education in Pre-War Japanese Language Schools in Hawaii. Honolulu: University of Hawaii.

External links

  • "Japanese Americans". () State of California.
  • Japanese American National Museum
  • Embassy of Japan February 16, 2019, at the Wayback Machine in Washington, DC
  • Japanese American Citizens League
  • Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaii
  • Japanese Cultural & Community Center of Northern California
  • Japanese American Community and Cultural Center of Southern California
  • Japanese American Historical Society
  • Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project
  • of San Jose, California
  • Japanese-American's own companies in USA
  • Japanese American Relocation Digital Archives November 25, 2002, at the Wayback Machine
  • in Florida
  • Nikkei Federation
  • Discover Nikkei
  • The War: Fighting for Democracy: Japanese Americans March 10, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  • "The War Relocation Centers of World War II: When Fear Was Stronger than Justice", a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan
  • U.S. Government interned Japanese from Latin America
  • Short radio episode from "Lil' Yokohama" by Toshio Mori, 1941. California Legacy Project.
  • American Life in the 20th Century in Washington State[permanent dead link] – University of Washington Digital Collections

japanese, americans, confused, with, miniseries, japanese, 日系アメリカ人, americans, japanese, ancestry, were, among, three, largest, asian, american, ethnic, communities, during, 20th, century, according, 2000, census, they, have, declined, number, constitute, sixt. Not to be confused with Japanese Americans miniseries Japanese Americans Japanese 日系アメリカ人 are Americans of Japanese ancestry Japanese Americans were among the three largest Asian American ethnic communities during the 20th century but according to the 2000 census they have declined in number to constitute the sixth largest Asian American group at around 1 469 637 including those of partial ancestry 1 Japanese Americans日系アメリカ人 NikkeiamerikajinJapanese Ancestry by stateTotal population1 469 637 1 0 44 of the total U S population 2019 Regions with significant populationsHawaii the West Coast especially in California and urban areas elsewhere LanguagesAmerican English JapaneseReligion33 Protestantism32 Unaffiliated25 Buddhism4 Catholicism4 Shinto 2 3 Related ethnic groupsJapanese people Ryukyuan AmericansAccording to the 2010 census the largest Japanese American communities were found in California with 272 528 Hawaii with 185 502 New York with 37 780 Washington with 35 008 Illinois with 17 542 and Ohio with 16 995 4 needs update Southern California has the largest Japanese American population in North America and the city of Gardena holds the densest Japanese American population in the 48 contiguous states 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Immigration 1 2 Internment and redress 2 Cultural profile 2 1 Generations 2 2 Languages 2 3 Education 2 3 1 Schools for Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals 3 Religion 3 1 Celebrations 4 Politics 5 Genetics 5 1 Risk for inherited diseases 6 Japanese Americans by state 6 1 Alaska 6 2 California 6 3 Connecticut 6 4 Georgia 6 5 Hawaii 6 6 Illinois 6 7 Massachusetts 6 8 Michigan 6 9 New Jersey 6 10 New York 6 11 Oregon 6 12 Rhode Island 6 13 Virginia 6 14 Washington 7 Neighborhoods and communities 7 1 West 7 2 Outside the West 8 Notable people 8 1 Politics 8 2 Science and technology 8 3 Art and literature 8 3 1 Art and architecture 8 3 2 Literature 8 4 Music 8 5 Sports 8 6 Entertainment and media 9 Works about Japanese Americans 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 In Hawaii 13 External linksHistory EditMain articles Japanese American history Japanese American life before World War II and Japanese American life after World War II Immigration Edit A street in Seattle s Nihonmachi in 1909 Japanese Americans in Hawaii 1942 People from Japan began migrating to the US in significant numbers following the political cultural and social changes stemming from the Meiji Restoration in 1868 These early Issei immigrants came primarily from small towns and rural areas in the southern Japanese prefectures of Hiroshima Yamaguchi Kumamoto and Fukuoka 6 and most of them settled in either Hawaii or along the West Coast The Japanese population in the United States grew from 148 in 1880 mostly students to 2 039 in 1890 and 24 326 by 1900 7 Japanese American in Nyssa Oregon 1931 In 1907 the Gentlemen s Agreement between the governments of Japan and the United States ended immigration of Japanese unskilled workers but permitted the immigration of businessmen students and spouses of Japanese immigrants already in the US Prior to the Gentlemen s Agreement about seven out of eight ethnic Japanese in the continental United States were men By 1924 the ratio had changed to approximately four women to every six men 8 Japanese immigration to the U S effectively ended when Congress passed the Immigration Act of 1924 which banned all but a token few Japanese people The earlier Naturalization Act of 1790 restricted naturalized United States citizenship to free white persons which excluded the Issei from citizenship As a result the Issei were unable to vote and faced additional restrictions such as the inability to own land under many state laws Due to these restrictions Japanese immigration to the United States between 1931 and 1950 only totaled 3 503 which is strikingly low compared to the totals of 46 250 people in 1951 1960 39 988 in 1961 70 49 775 in 1971 80 47 085 in 1981 90 and 67 942 in 1991 2000 9 Because no new immigrants from Japan were permitted after 1924 almost all pre World War II Japanese Americans born after this time were born in the United States This generation the Nisei became a distinct cohort from the Issei generation in terms of age citizenship and English language ability in addition to the usual generational differences Institutional and interpersonal racism led many of the Nisei to marry other Nisei resulting in a third distinct generation of Japanese Americans the Sansei Significant Japanese immigration did not occur again until the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 ended 40 years of bans against immigration from Japan and other countries In the last few decades immigration from Japan has been more like that from Europe The numbers involve on average 5 to 10 thousand per year and is similar to the amount of immigration to the US from Germany This is in stark contrast to the rest of Asia where better opportunity of life is the primary impetus for immigration Internment and redress Edit Main articles Internment of Japanese Americans and Japanese American redress and court cases Families of Japanese ancestry being removed from Los Angeles during World War II Anti Axis Committee headquarters in the Little Tokyo section of Los Angeles 1941 During World War II an estimated 120 000 Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals or citizens residing on the West Coast of the United States were forcibly interned in ten different camps across the Western United States The internment was based on the race or ancestry rather than the activities of the interned Families including children were interned together 10 and 5 000 were able to voluntarily relocate outside the exclusion zone 11 Japanese American war camp in 1943 AUG 1943 In 1948 the Evacuation Claims Act provided some compensation for property losses but the act required documentation that many former inmates had lost during their removal and excluded lost opportunities wages or interest from its calculations Less than 24 000 filed a claim and most received only a fraction of the losses they claimed 12 Four decades later the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 officially acknowledged the fundamental violations of the basic civil liberties and constitutional rights of the internment 13 Many Japanese Americans consider the term internment camp a euphemism and prefer to refer to the forced relocation of Japanese Americans as imprisonment in concentration camps 14 Webster s New World Fourth College Edition defines a concentration camp A prison camp in which political dissidents members of minority ethnic groups etc are confined Cultural profile EditGenerations Edit The nomenclature for each of their generations who are citizens or long term residents of countries other than Japan used by Japanese Americans and other nationals of Japanese descent are explained here they are formed by combining one of the Japanese numbers corresponding to the generation with the Japanese word for generation sei 世 The Japanese American communities have themselves distinguished their members with terms like Issei Nisei and Sansei which describe the first second and third generations of immigrants The fourth generation is called Yonsei 四世 and the fifth is called Gosei 五世 The term Nikkei 日系 encompasses Japanese immigrants in all countries and of all generations Generation SummaryIssei 一世 The generation of people born in Japan who later immigrated to another country Nisei 二世 The generation of people born in North America Latin America Hawaii or any country outside Japan either to at least one Issei or one non immigrant Japanese parent Sansei 三世 The generation of people born in North America Latin America Hawaii or any country outside Japan to at least one Nisei parent Yonsei 四世 The generation of people born in North America Latin America Hawaii or any country outside Japan to at least one Sansei parent Gosei 五世 The generation of people born in North America Latin America Hawaii or any country outside Japan to at least one Yonsei parent The kanreki 還暦 a pre modern Japanese rite of passage to old age at 60 is now being celebrated by increasing numbers of Japanese American Nisei Rituals are enactments of shared meanings norms and values and this traditional Japanese rite of passage highlights a collective response among the Nisei to the conventional dilemmas of growing older 15 Languages Edit See also Japanese language education in the United States Issei and many nisei speak Japanese in addition to English as a second language In general later generations of Japanese Americans speak English as their first language though some do learn Japanese later as a second language In Hawaii however where Nikkei are about one fifth of the whole population Japanese is a major language spoken and studied by many of the state s residents across ethnicities citation needed It is taught in private Japanese language schools as early as the second grade As a courtesy to the large number of Japanese tourists from Japan Japanese characters are provided on place signs public transportation and civic facilities The Hawaii media market has a few locally produced Japanese language newspapers and magazines although these are on the verge of dying out due to a lack of interest on the part of the local Hawaii born Japanese population Stores that cater to the tourist industry often have Japanese speaking personnel To show their allegiance to the US many nisei and sansei intentionally avoided learning Japanese But as many of the later generations find their identities in both Japan and America or American society broadens its definition of cultural identity studying Japanese is becoming more popular than it once was citation needed Education Edit Street in Terminal Island California Japanese American in Oregon Japanese American culture places great value on education and culture Across generations children are often instilled with a strong desire to enter the rigors of higher education Math and reading scores on the SAT and ACT may often exceed the national averages Japanese Americans have the largest showing of any ethnic group in nationwide Advanced Placement testing each year citation needed A large majority of Japanese Americans obtain post secondary degrees and are often confronted with the model minority stereotype a characterization that first gained media attention during the 1960s Among its earlier proponents sociologist William Petersen writing in 1966 on Japanese American success stated that They have established this remarkable record moreover by their own almost totally unaided effort Every attempt to hamper their progress resulted only in enhancing their determination to succeed 16 Although their numbers have declined slightly in recent years Japanese Americans are still a prominent presence in Ivy League schools the top University of California campuses including Berkeley and UCLA and other elite universities citation needed The 2000 census reported that 40 8 of Japanese Americans held a college degree 17 Schools for Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals Edit Nihon Go Gakko in Seattle Seigakuin Atlanta International School on March 23 2014 A Japanese school opened in Hawaii in 1893 and other Japanese schools for temporary settlers in North America followed 18 In the years prior to World War II many second generation Japanese American attended the American school by day and the Japanese school in the evening to keep up their Japanese skill as well as English Other first generation Japanese American parents were worried that their child might go through the same discrimination when going to school so they gave them the choice to either go back to Japan to be educated or to stay in America with their parents and study both languages 19 page needed Anti Japanese sentiment during World War I resulted in public efforts to close Japanese language schools The 1927 Supreme Court case Farrington v Tokushige protected the Japanese American community s right to have Japanese language private institutions During the internment of Japanese Americans in World War II many Japanese schools were closed After the war many Japanese schools reopened 20 There are primary school junior high school Japanese international schools within the United States Some are classified as nihonjin gakkō or Japanese international schools operated by Japanese associations 21 and some are classified as Shiritsu zaigai kyōiku shisetsu 私立在外教育施設 or overseas branches of Japanese private schools 22 They are Seigakuin Atlanta International School Chicago Futabakai Japanese School Japanese School of Guam Nishiyamato Academy of California near Los Angeles Japanese School of New Jersey and New York Japanese School A boarding senior high school Keio Academy of New York is near New York City It is a Shiritsu zaigai kyōiku shisetsu 22 There are also supplementary Japanese educational institutions hoshu jugyō kō that hold Japanese classes on weekends They are located in several US cities 23 The supplementary schools target Japanese nationals and second generation Japanese Americans living in the United States There are also Japanese heritage schools for third generation and beyond Japanese Americans 24 Rachel Endo of Hamline University 25 the author of Realities Rewards and Risks of Heritage Language Education Perspectives from Japanese Immigrant Parents in a Midwestern Community wrote that the heritage schools generally emphasize learning about Japanese American historical experiences and Japanese culture in more loosely defined terms 26 Tennessee Meiji Gakuin High School shiritsu zaigai kyōiku shisetsu and International Bilingual School unapproved by the Japanese Ministry of Education or MEXT were full time Japanese schools that were formerly in existence Religion EditReligious Makeup of Japanese Americans 2012 27 Christianity 37 Unaffiliated 32 Buddhism 25 Shintoism and Other 6 Japanese Americans practice a wide range of religions including Mahayana Buddhism Jōdo Shinshu Jōdo shu Nichiren Shingon and Zen forms being most prominent their majority faith Shinto and Christianity usually Protestant or Catholic In many ways due to the longstanding nature of Buddhist and Shinto practices in Japanese society many of the cultural values and traditions commonly associated with Japanese tradition have been strongly influenced by these religious forms San Jose Betsuin Buddhist Temple A large number of the Japanese American community continue to practice Buddhism in some form and a number of community traditions and festivals continue to center around Buddhist institutions For example one of the most popular community festivals is the annual Obon Festival which occurs in the summer and provides an opportunity to reconnect with their customs and traditions and to pass these traditions and customs to the young These kinds of festivals are mostly popular in communities with large populations of Japanese Americans such as Southern California and Hawaii A reasonable number of Japanese people both in and out of Japan are secular as Shinto and Buddhism are most often practiced by rituals such as marriages or funerals and not through faithful worship as defines religion for many Americans Many Japanese Americans also practice Christianity Among mainline denominations the Presbyterians have long been active The First Japanese Presbyterian Church of San Francisco opened in 1885 28 Los Angeles Holiness Church was founded by six Japanese men and women in 1921 29 There is also the Japanese Evangelical Missionary Society JEMS formed in the 1950s It operates Asian American Christian Fellowships AACF programs on university campuses especially in California 30 The Japanese language ministries are fondly known as Nichigo in Japanese American Christian communities The newest trend includes Asian American members who do not have a Japanese heritage 31 Celebrations Edit An important annual festival for Japanese Americans is the Obon Festival which happens in July or August of each year Across the country Japanese Americans gather on fair grounds churches and large civic parking lots and commemorate the memory of their ancestors and their families through folk dances and food Carnival booths are usually set up so Japanese American children have the opportunity to play together Japanese American celebrations tend to be more sectarian in nature and focus on the community sharing aspects A nebuta float during Nisei Week in Los Angeles Kazari streamers hung during the Tanabata festival in Los Angeles Little Tokyo Bon Odori in Seattle A kagami mochi display for the upcoming Japanese New Year in San Diego s Nijiya Market Major celebrations in the United States Date Name RegionJanuary 1 Shōgatsu New Year s Celebration NationwideFebruary Japanese Heritage Fair Honolulu HIFebruary to March Cherry Blossom Festival Honolulu HIMarch 3 Hinamatsuri Girls Day HawaiiMarch Honolulu Festival Honolulu HIMarch Hawaiʻi International Taiko Festival Honolulu HIMarch International Cherry Blossom Festival Macon GAMarch to April National Cherry Blossom Festival Washington DCApril Northern California Cherry Blossom Festival San Francisco CAApril Pasadena Cherry Blossom Festival Pasadena CAApril Seattle Cherry Blossom Festival Seattle WAMay 5 Tango no Sekku Boys Day HawaiiMay Shinnyo En Toro Nagashi Memorial Day Floating Lantern Ceremony Honolulu HIJune Pan Pacific Festival Matsuri in Hawaiʻi Honolulu HIJuly 7 Tanabata Star Festival NationwideJuly August Obon Festival NationwideAugust Nihonmachi Street Fair San Francisco CAAugust Nisei Week Los Angeles CAPolitics Edit Patsy Mink entered the U S House of Representatives in 1965 as the first woman of color in either chamber of Congress Japanese Americans have shown strong support for Democratic candidates in recent elections Shortly prior to the 2004 US presidential election Japanese Americans narrowly favored Democrat John Kerry by a 42 to 38 margin over Republican George W Bush 32 In the 2008 US presidential election the National Asian American Survey found that Japanese Americans favored Democrat Barack Obama by a 62 to 16 margin over Republican John McCain while 22 were still undecided 33 In the 2012 presidential election a majority of Japanese Americans 70 voted for Barack Obama 34 In the 2016 presidential election majority of Japanese Americans 74 voted for Hillary Clinton 35 In pre election surveys for the 2020 presidential election 61 to 72 of Japanese Americans planned to vote for Joe Biden 36 37 Genetics EditRisk for inherited diseases Edit Studies have looked into the risk factors that are more prone to Japanese Americans specifically in hundreds of family generations of Nisei The generation of people born in North America Latin America Hawaii or any country outside Japan either to at least one Issei or one non immigrant Japanese parent second generation pro bands A person serving as the starting point for the genetic study of a family used in medicine and psychiatry The risk factors for genetic diseases in Japanese Americans include coronary heart disease and diabetes One study called the Japanese American Community Diabetes Study that started in 1994 and went through 2003 involved the pro bands taking part to test whether the increased risk of diabetes among Japanese Americans is due to the effects of Japanese Americans having a more westernized lifestyle due to the many differences between the United States of America and Japan One of the main goals of the study was to create an archive of DNA samples which could be used to identify which diseases are more susceptible in Japanese Americans Concerns with these studies of the risks of inherited diseases in Japanese Americans is that information pertaining to the genetic relationship may not be consistent with the reported biological family information given of Nisei second generation pro bands 38 Also research has been put on concerning apolipoprotein E genotypes this polymorphism has three alleles e2 e3 and e4 and was determined from research because of its known association with increased cholesterol levels and risk of coronary heart disease in Japanese Americans Specifically too the apolipoprotein e4 allele is linked to Alzheimer s disease as well Also there is increased coronary heart disease in Japanese American men with a mutation in the cholesterol ester transfer protein gene despite having increased levels of HDL By definition HDL are plasma high density lipoproteins that show a genetic relationship with coronary heart disease CHD The cholesterol ester transfer protein CETP helps the transfer of cholesterol esters from lipoproteins to other lipoproteins in the human body It plays a fundamental role in the reverse transport of cholesterol to the liver which is why a mutation in this can lead to coronary heart disease Studies have shown that the CETP is linked to increased HDL levels There is a very common pattern of two different cholesterol ester transfer protein gene mutations D442G 5 1 intron 14G A 0 5 found in about 3 469 Japanese American men This was based on a program called the Honolulu Heart Program The mutations correlated with decreased CETP levels 35 and increased HDL cholesterol levels 10 for D442G The relative risk of CHD was 1 43 in men with mutations P lt 0 05 and after research found for CHD risk factors the relative risk went up to 1 55 P 0 02 after further adjustments for HDL levels the relative risk went up again to 1 68 P 0 008 Genetic CETP deficiency is an independent risk factor for coronary heart disease which is due mainly to increased CHD risks in Japanese American men with the D442G mutation and lipoprotein cholesterol levels between 41 and 60 mg dl 39 With research and investigations the possibility of finding bad genes denounces the Japanese Americans and will be associated only with Japanese American ancestry leading to other issues the Japanese Americans had to deal with in the past such as discrimination and prejudice 40 Japanese Americans by state EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2013 Alaska Edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it June 2013 California Edit See also History of the Japanese in Los Angeles and History of the Japanese in San Francisco In the early 1900s Japanese Americans established fishing communities on Terminal Island and in San Diego 41 By 1923 there were two thousand Japanese fishermen sailing out of Los Angeles Harbor 42 By the 1930s legislation was passed that attempted to limit Japanese fishermen Still areas like San Francisco s Japantown managed to thrive Due to the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II historically Japanese areas fell into disrepair or became adopted by other minority groups in the case of Black and Latino populations in Little Tokyo Boats owned by Japanese Americans were confiscated by the U S Navy 43 One of the vessels owned by a Japanese American the Alert built in 1930 44 became YP 264 in December 1941 41 and was finally struck from the Naval Vessel Register in 2014 45 When Japanese Americans returned from internment many settled in neighborhoods where they set up their own community centers in order to feel accepted Today many have been renamed cultural centers and focus on the sharing of Japanese culture with local community members especially in the sponsorship of Obon festivals 46 The city of Torrance in Greater Los Angeles has headquarters of Japanese automakers and offices of other Japanese companies Because of the abundance of Japanese restaurants and other cultural offerings are in the city and Willy Blackmore of L A Weekly wrote that Torrance was essentially Japan s 48th prefecture 47 Connecticut Edit Two supplementary Japanese language schools are located in Connecticut each educating the local Japanese population The Japanese School of New York is located in Greenwich Connecticut in Greater New York City it had formerly been located in New York City There is also the Japanese Language School of Greater Hartford located in Hartford Connecticut Georgia Edit The Seigakuin Atlanta International School is located in Peachtree Corners in Greater Atlanta Hawaii Edit Main article Japanese in Hawaii Illinois Edit As of 2011 there is a Japanese community in Arlington Heights near Chicago Jay Shimotake the president of the Mid America Japanese Club an organization located in Arlington Heights said Arlington Heights is a very convenient location and Japanese people in the business environment know it s a nice location surrounding O Hare airport 48 The Chicago Futabakai Japanese School is located in Arlington Heights The Mitsuwa Marketplace a shopping center owned by Japanese opened around 1981 Many Japanese companies have their US headquarters in nearby Hoffman Estates and Schaumburg 48 Massachusetts Edit There is a Japanese School of Language in Medford 49 Another the Amherst Japanese Language School is in South Hadley in the 5 college area of the western part of the state 50 Most Japanese Americans in the state live in Greater Boston with a high concentration in the town of Brookline Porter Square Cambridge has a Japanese cultural district and shopping plaza Michigan Edit As of April 2013 the largest Japanese national population in Michigan is in Novi with 2 666 Japanese residents and the next largest populations are respectively in Ann Arbor West Bloomfield Township Farmington Hills and Battle Creek The state has 481 Japanese employment facilities providing 35 554 local jobs 391 of them are in Southeast Michigan providing 20 816 jobs and the 90 in other regions in the state provide 14 738 jobs The Japanese Direct Investment Survey of the Consulate General of Japan Detroit stated that over 2 208 more Japanese residents were employed in the State of Michigan as of October 1 2012 than had been in 2011 51 New Jersey Edit As of March 2011 about 2 500 Japanese Americans combined live in Edgewater and Fort Lee this is the largest concentration of Japanese Americans in the state 52 The New Jersey Japanese School is located in Oakland Paramus Catholic High School hosts a weekend Japanese school and Englewood Cliffs has a Japanese school Other smaller Japanese American populations are also located in the remainder of Bergen County and other parts of the state Mitsuwa Marketplace has a location in Edgewater that also houses a mini shopping complex 53 New York Edit Main article Japanese in New York City Oregon Edit Main article History of the Japanese in Portland Oregon Rhode Island Edit Main article Victory over Japan Day Rhode Island is the only state celebrating Victory Over Japan Day V J Day as a holiday Every year the holiday is observed on the second Monday in August It has been claimed that this holiday is racially based and negatively affects Japanese American citizens in RI and other states in the U S ignoring traumas caused by the history of the internment camp and deaths of between 129 000 and 226 000 civilians and lasting radiation poisoning due to the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki It is reported that in Rhode Island some Japanese are uncomfortable leaving their homes on Victory Day because they fear violence 54 Virginia Edit There are about 5 500 Japanese Americans in Northern Virginia representing the majority of Japanese Americans in the state and the multi state Baltimore Washington metropolitan area A small but relatively high number of Japanese Americans can be found areas surrounding the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech Washington Edit Main article History of the Japanese in SeattleNeighborhoods and communities EditSee also Japantown and List of U S cities with large Japanese American populations This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Little Tokyo Village in Los Angeles Little Tokyo Miyako Mall in San Francisco s Japantown Uwajimaya Village in Seattle West Edit Hawaii Main article Japanese in Hawaii California Greater Los Angeles Anaheim and Orange County 55 Cerritos Hawaiian Gardens and adjacent cities Fontana in the Inland Empire Fullerton in Orange County Gardena in Los Angeles South Bay area Lomita in the L A area Long Beach California historic Japanese fisheries presence in Terminal Island Los Angeles especially the Little Tokyo section Palm Desert the Japanese also developed the year round agricultural industries in the Coachella Valley and Imperial Valley Pasadena in the Los Angeles San Gabriel Valley Santa Monica esp Blacks Beach Sawtelle California in West Los Angeles Torrance in Los Angeles South Bay area the largest Japanese community in North America and the second largest Japanese community in the U S 56 Venice Los Angeles historically Japanese fisheries in Marina Del Rey Terminal Island site of a former Japanese fishing village in Los Angeles Harbor Notable for a Japanese English pidgin spoken there before WWII It was demolished during the War after its residents were sent to Manzanar San Diego area University City Chula Vista Japanese community center in Vista in North County one of two of its kind in Southern California Central Valley California region Bakersfield Kern County Butte County Fresno 5 of county residents have Japanese ancestry Livingston California in Merced County Lodi Merced Stockton Sutter County Yuba County San Francisco Bay Area the main concentration of Nisei and Sansei in the 20th century Alameda County concentrated and historic populations in the cities of Alameda Berkeley Fremont Oakland and Hayward Contra Costa County concentrated in Walnut Creek San Mateo County especially Daly City and Pacifica San Jose has one of the three remaining officially recognized Japantowns in North America Santa Clara County concentrated in Cupertino Palo Alto Santa Clara and Sunnyvale San Francisco notably in the Japantown district 57 Santa Cruz County Monterey County especially Salinas California Sacramento and some neighborhoods of Elk Grove Florin and Walnut Grove Washington State Seattle area Bellevue Redmond Tacoma Puget Sound region San Juan Islands have Japanese fisheries for over a century Skagit Valley of Washington Yakima Valley Washington Chehalis Valley of Washington Oregon Ontario Portland and surrounding area Southern Oregon valleys Willamette Valley Idaho Boise Area Caldwell Meridian Nampa Arizona Phoenix Area notably a section of Grand Avenue in Northwest Phoenix and Maryvale Las Vegas Area with a reference of Japanese farmers on Bonzai Slough Arizona near Needles California Southern Arizona part of the exclusion area for Japanese internment during World War II along with the Pacific coast states Yuma County Colorado River Valley New Mexico Gallup New Mexico in World War II the city fought to prevent the internment of its 800 Japanese residents Colorado Denver note Sakura Square Greeley Pueblo Utah Salt Lake City Outside the West Edit In the Southern Midwestern and Northeastern United States the New York metropolitan area has the highest number of Japanese Americans followed by the Washington metropolitan area 58 Arlington Virginia and Alexandria Virginia the Northern Virginia region Bergen County New Jersey Boone County Kentucky Carmel Indiana Boston Massachusetts Cambridge Massachusetts Brookline Massachusetts Chicago Illinois and suburbs Arlington Heights Buffalo Grove Elk Grove Village Evanston Kane County Naperville Schaumburg Skokie Wilmette Columbus Ohio Fayetteville North Carolina close to the Research Triangle Grand Prairie Texas the Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex area Japan North Carolina former town bulldozed by dam construction Kansas City metro area New York City New York according to the Japanese Embassy of the US over 100 000 persons of Japanese ancestry live in the NYC metro area including South Shore Long Island and Hudson Valley Fairfield County Connecticut and Northern New Jersey Northern Indiana has a small but evident Japanese community Novi Michigan outside Detroit Philadelphia Pennsylvania with the suburbs of Chester County Salem New Jersey and Cherry Hill New Jersey see Delaware Valley Salisbury Maryland and Ocean City Maryland see Wicomico County Seabrook Farms New Jersey 59 South Texas Rio Grande Valley had Japanese farmers Washington D C and suburbs in Maryland and Northern Virginia Yamato Colony Florida in South Florida Notable people EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of Japanese Americans Sessue Hayakawa Bob Matsui Eric Shinseki Shin Koyamada Norman Mineta Michio Kaku Mirai Nagasu Hikaru Utada James Iha George Takei Mike Shinoda Ellison Onizuka Yuna Ito Sadao Munemori Harry B Harris Jr Melody Jake Shimabukuro Sono Osato Francis Fukuyama Hayley Kiyoko Ryan HigaPolitics Edit Senator Inouye of Hawaii was named the President pro tempore of the United States Senate in 2010 becoming the highest ranking Asian American in congressional history After the Territory of Hawaiʻi s statehood in 1959 Japanese American political empowerment took a step forward with the election of Daniel K Inouye to Congress Spark Matsunaga was elected to the US House of Representatives in 1963 and in 1965 Patsy Mink became the first Asian American woman elected to the United States Congress Inouye Matsunaga and Mink s success led to the gradual acceptance of Japanese American leadership on the national stage Federal level appointments include Eric Shinseki and Norman Y Mineta the first Japanese American military chief of staff and federal cabinet secretary respectively As an expansion of immigration continued in 1920 more restrictions on women were put in place This also came with the push for more Single women to act as continental brides and come to the United States and more to raise up strong Japanese communities by marrying Japanese settlers who lived there This push also called for women to be trained to best server the household needs husband and mostly the empire 60 Japanese American members of the United States House of Representatives have included Daniel K Inouye Spark Matsunaga Patsy Mink Norman Mineta Bob Matsui Pat Saiki Mike Honda Doris Matsui Mazie Hirono Mark Takano Mark Takai and Jill Tokuda Japanese American members of the United States Senate have included Daniel K Inouye Samuel I Hayakawa Spark Matsunaga and Mazie Hirono In 2010 Inouye was sworn in as President pro tempore of the United States Senate making him the highest ranking Asian American politician in American history up to that time George Ariyoshi served as the Governor of Hawaiʻi from 1974 to 1986 He was the first American of Asian descent to be elected governor of a state of the United States David Ige was the governor of Hawaii from 2014 2022 Kinjiro Matsudaira was elected mayor of Edmonston Maryland in 1927 and 1943 61 In 1957 Japanese American James Kanno was elected as the first mayor of California s Fountain Valley 62 Norm Mineta became mayor of San Jose California in 1971 63 In 1980 Eunice Sato became the first Asian American female mayor of a major American city when she was elected mayor of Long Beach California 64 Science and technology Edit Yoichiro Nambu the 2008 Nobel Laureate in Physics Many Japanese Americans have also gained prominence in science and technology In 1979 biochemist Harvey Itano became the first Japanese American elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences Charles J Pedersen won the 1987 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his methods of synthesizing crown ethers Yoichiro Nambu won the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on quantum chromodynamics and spontaneous symmetry breaking Shuji Nakamura won the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physics for the invention of efficient blue light emitting diodes Syukuro Manabe won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics for his contributions to the physical modeling of earth s climate quantifying variability and reliably predicting global warming Michio Kaku is a theoretical physicist specializing in string field theory and a well known science popularizer Ellison Onizuka became the first Asian American astronaut and was the mission specialist aboard Challenger at the time of its explosion Immunologist Santa J Ono became the first Japanese American president of a major research university the University of Cincinnati Ono subsequently served as president of the University of British Columbia and University of Michigan Bell M Shimada was a notable fisheries scientist of the 1950s after whom the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research ship NOAAS Bell M Shimada R 227 and the Shimada Seamount in the Pacific Ocean were named 65 66 In 2018 Lauren Kiyomi Williams became the second ever tenured female mathematician of the Harvard mathematics department Art and literature Edit Art and architecture Edit Artist Sueo Serisawa helped establish the California Impressionist style of painting Yoko Ono s Fluxus art and performance art has been exhibited internationally Other influential Japanese American artists include Chiura Obata Isamu Noguchi Kenjiro Nomura George Tsutakawa George Nakashima Hideo Noda and Ruth Asawa Architect Minoru Yamasaki designed the original World Trade Center completed in 1973 and several other large scale projects Gyo Obata designed the National Air and Space Museum in Washington D C completed in 1976 and the pavilion of the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles completed in 1992 Literature Edit 1984 American Book Award winner Mine Okubo Japanese American recipients of the American Book Award include Milton Murayama 1980 Ronald Phillip Tanaka 1982 Mine Okubo 1984 Keiho Soga 1985 Taisanboku Mori 1985 Sojin Takei 1985 Muin Ozaki 1985 Toshio Mori 1986 William Minoru Hohri 1989 Sesshu Foster 1990 and 2010 Karen Tei Yamashita 1991 and 2011 Sheila Hamanaka 1992 Lawson Fusao Inada 1994 Ronald Takaki 1994 Kimiko Hahn 1996 Lois Ann Yamanaka 2000 Ruth Ozeki 2004 Hiroshi Kashiwagi 2005 Yuko Taniguchi 2008 and Frank Abe 2019 Hisaye Yamamoto received an American Book Award for Lifetime Achievement in 1986 Taro Yashima won the Children s Book Award in 1955 for his book Crow Boy Cynthia Kadohata won the Newbery Medal in 2005 and National Book Award for Young People s Literature in 2013 Michi Weglyn and Ronald Takaki received the Anisfield Wolf Book Award in 1977 and 1994 respectively Dale Furutani won the Anthony Award and the Macavity Award in 1997 Poet laureate of San Francisco from 2000 to 2002 Janice Mirikitani published three volumes of poems Lawson Fusao Inada was named poet laureate of the state of Oregon 2006 2010 Tomie Arai s work is part of permanent collection of Museum of Modern Art Library of Congress and the Museum of Chinese in the Americas Michiko Kakutani is an American Pulitzer Prize winning literary critic and former chief book critic for The New York Times from 1983 to 2017 Karen Tei Yamashita was named the recipient of the National Book Foundation s Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters in 2021 Music Edit Midori Goto in 2013 Classical violinist Midori Gotō is a recipient of the prestigious Avery Fisher Prize 2001 while world renowned violinist Anne Akiko Meyers received an Avery Fisher career grant in 1993 Juno Award nominated classical violinist Hidetaro Suzuki was the concertmaster of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra from 1978 to 2005 Grammy Award winning singer songwriter Yoko Ono released 14 studio albums and was named the 11th most successful dance club artist of all time by Billboard Magazine Other notable Japanese American musicians include singer actress and Broadway star Pat Suzuki rapper Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park and Fort Minor rapper Kikuo Nishi aka KeyKool of The Visionaries Hiro Yamamoto original bassist of Soundgarden ukulele player Jake Shimabukuro guitarist James Iha of The Smashing Pumpkins fame singer songwriter Rachael Yamagata bilingual singer songwriter Emi Meyer and Trivium lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Matt Heafy Marc Okubo guitarist of Veil of Maya is of Japanese descent Singer songwriter and composer Mari Iijima is a Japanese expat currently living in the United States J Pop singers Hikaru Utada and Joe Inoue were both born in the United States but gained their fame in Japan Sports Edit 1952 gold medalist Ford Konno Japanese Americans first made an impact in Olympic sports in the late 1940s and in the 1950s Harold Sakata won a weightlifting silver medal in the 1948 Olympics while Japanese Americans Tommy Kono weightlifting Yoshinobu Oyakawa 100 meter backstroke and Ford Konno 1500 meter freestyle each won gold and set Olympic records in the 1952 Olympics Also at the 1952 Olympics Evelyn Kawamoto won two bronze medals in swimming Konno won another gold and silver swimming medal at the same Olympics and added a silver medal in 1956 while Kono set another Olympic weightlifting record in 1956 Several decades later Eric Sato won gold 1988 and bronze 1992 medals in volleyball while his sister Liane Sato won bronze in the same sport in 1992 Bryan Clay mother from Japan won the decathlon gold medal in the 2008 Olympics the silver medal in the 2004 Olympics and was the sport s 2005 world champion Apolo Anton Ohno father from Japan won eight Olympic medals in short track speed skating two gold in 2002 2006 and 2010 as well as a world cup championship Brothers Kawika and Erik Shoji won bronze medals in volleyball in 2016 Michael Norman mother from Japan was a member of the gold medal winning 4 400 meters relay at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo and won an individual gold medal in the 400 meter race at the 2022 World Athletics Championships Swimmers Erica Sullivan and Jay Litherland both with mothers from Japan each won silver medals at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo In figure skating Kristi Yamaguchi a fourth generation Japanese American won three national championship titles one in singles two in pairs two world titles and the 1992 Olympic gold medal in singles figure skating Rena Inoue a Japanese immigrant to America who later became a US citizen competed at the 2006 Olympics in pair skating for the United States Kyoko Ina who was born in Japan but raised in the United States competed for the United States in singles and pairs and was a multiple national champion and an Olympian with two different partners Two time Olympian Mirai Nagasu won the 2008 U S Figure Skating Championships at the age of 14 becoming the second youngest woman to ever win that title Alex and Maia Shibutani are two time national champions in ice dancing and 2018 Olympic bronze medalists In distance running Miki Michiko Gorman won the Boston and New York City marathons twice in the 1970s A former American record holder at the distance she is the only woman to win both races twice and is one of only two women to win both marathons in the same year In professional sports Nisei born Wataru Misaka made the New York Knicks roster in 1947 as the first person of color to play in modern professional basketball just months after Jackie Robinson had broken the color barrier in Major League Baseball for the Brooklyn Dodgers 67 Misaka played college basketball for the Utah Utes and led the team to win the 1944 NCAA and 1947 NIT championships He took a two year hiatus between these titles to serve in the United States Army in the American occupation of Japan 68 69 Wally Kaname Yonamine was a professional running back for the San Francisco 49ers in 1947 Lenn Sakata born in Hawaii played in the MLB from 1977 to 1987 Rex Walters whose mother was Japanese played in the NBA from 1993 to 2000 Lindsey Yamasaki was the first Asian American to play in the WNBA and finished off her NCAA career with the third most career 3 pointers at Stanford University Hikaru Nakamura became the youngest American ever to earn the titles of National Master age 10 and International Grandmaster age 15 in chess In 2004 at the age of 16 he won the U S Chess Championship for the first time He later won four other times Collin Morikawa won golf s 2020 PGA Championship and 2021 Open Championship Naomi Osaka who held U S citizenship until she renounced it in 2019 70 was the main torchbearer of the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo 71 Osaka resides in the United States 72 Kyle Larson born to an American father and Japanese American mother won the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series Entertainment and media Edit 1957 Academy Award winner Miyoshi Umeki Miyoshi Umeki won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in 1957 Actors Sessue Hayakawa Mako Iwamatsu and Pat Morita were nominated for Academy Awards in 1957 1966 and 1984 respectively Steven Okazaki won the 1990 Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject for his film Days of Waiting The Life amp Art of Estelle Ishigo Chris Tashima won the 1997 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film Audrey Marrs won the 2010 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Kazu Hiro won the Academy Award for Best Makeup and Hairstyling in 2018 and 2020 winning the second award as an American citizen Jack Soo born Goro Suzuki Valentine s Day and Barney Miller George Takei Star Trek fame and Pat Morita Happy Days and The Karate Kid helped pioneer acting roles for Asian Americans while playing secondary roles on the small screen during the 1960s and 1970s In 1976 Morita also starred in Mr T and Tina the first American sitcom centered on a person of Asian descent Keiko Yoshida appeared on the 1999 2005 TV show ZOOM on PBS Kids Gregg Araki director of independent films is also Japanese American Shin Koyamada had a leading role in the Warner Bros epic movie The Last Samurai and Disney Channel movie franchise Wendy Wu Homecoming Warrior and TV series Disney Channel Games Masi Oka played a prominent role in the NBC series Heroes Grant Imahara appeared on the Discovery Channel series MythBusters and Derek Mio appeared in the NBC series Day One Daisuke Tsuji played the Crown Prince in the Amazon original series The Man in the High Castle and as the voice and motion capture of the main protagonist Jin Sakai in the 2020 video game Ghost of Tsushima Cary Fukunaga is an Emmy award winning filmmaker and writer known for directing and producing the first season of HBO series True Detective and for directing the 2021 James Bond film No Time to Die Karen Fukuhara grew up speaking Japanese as her first language and attended Japanese language schools on Saturdays for 11 years She got her start in the entertainment industry as a host for Disney Channel s Movie Surfers before she made her film debut in 2016 s Suicide Squad as Tatsu Yamashiro Katana Fukuhara has since lent her talent to live action and animated shows such as The Boys She Ra and the Princesses of Power and Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts Japanese Americans now anchor TV newscasts in markets all over the country Notable anchors include Tritia Toyota Adele Arakawa David Ono Kent Ninomiya Lori Matsukawa and Rob Fukuzaki 73 Works about Japanese Americans EditSee also List of feature films about the Japanese American internment Category Films about the internment of Japanese Americans and Category Books about the internment of Japanese Americans In 2010 TBS produced a five part ten hour fictional Japanese language miniseries Japanese Americans This featured many of the major events and themes of the Issei and Nisei experience including emigration racism picture brides farming pressure due to the China and Pacific wars internment a key character who serves in the 442nd and the ongoing redefinition in identity of what it means to be Japanese and American 74 See also Edit Japan portal United States portalBuddhist Churches of America Young Buddhist Association amp Buddhist Women s Association Honpa Hongwanji Mission of Hawaii Zenshuji Soto Misson amp Soto Zen Buddhist Association Midwest Buddhist Temple Ginza Holiday Festival San Francisco Peace Pagoda List of Shinto shrines in the United States Chicago Shimpo Day of Remembrance Japanese Americans Go for Broke Monument Japanese American Citizens League Japanese American National Library Japanese American National Museum Japanese American service in World War II 442nd Infantry Regiment and the related 522nd Field Artillery Battalion 100th Infantry Battalion Military Intelligence Service List of Japanese American Servicemen and Servicewomen in World War II Japanese Community Youth Council San Francisco Japanese in Chicago Japanese in Los Angeles Japanese in New York City Japanese Argentines Japanese Brazilians Japanese Chileans Japanese Colombians Japanese Mexicans Japanese Peruvians Japanese Filipinos Japanese Canadians Japanese Australians Japanese New Zealanders Japanese in the United Kingdom Model minority Nisei Baseball Research Project Pacific Movement of the Eastern World Japan United States relationsReferences Edit a b ACS Demographic and Housing Estimates U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on March 26 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Asian Americans A Mosaic of Faiths Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project July 19 2012 Archived from the original on July 16 2013 Retrieved March 17 2015 Japanese Americans Pew Forum on Religion amp Public Life Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved March 17 2015 Data Access and Dissemination Systems DADS American FactFinder Results Archived from the original on October 12 2016 Retrieved March 17 2015 Cities with the Highest Percentage of Japanese in the United States ZipAtlas Archived from the original on August 12 2020 Retrieved April 16 2020 Glenn Evelyn 2010 Issei Nisei War Bride Three Generations of Japanese American Women in Domestic Service Temple University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 87722 412 9 Neiwert David 2005 Strawberry Days Palgrave Macmillan p 15 ISBN 978 1 4039 6792 3 Hoobler Dorothy and Thomas 1995 The Japanese American Family Album Oxford University Press p 34 ISBN 0 19 512423 5 2001 Statistical Yearbook of the Immigration and Naturalization Service Washington D C Government Printing Office 2003 pp 17 20 About the Incarceration Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved August 19 2014 Niiya Brian Voluntary evacuation Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved August 19 2014 Yang Alice Redress movement Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved August 19 2014 Civil Liberties Act of 1988 Archived from the original on January 17 2012 Schumacher Matos Edward Grisham Lori February 10 2012 Euphemisms Concentration Camps And The Japanese Internment NPR Archived from the original on May 17 2018 Retrieved April 5 2018 Doi Mary L A Transformation of Ritual The Nisei 60th Birthday Archived March 26 2021 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Cross Cultural Gerontology Vol 6 No 2 April 1991 Petersen William January 9 1966 Success Story Japanese American Style New York Times Magazine Le Cuong Socioeconomic Statistics amp Semographics Archived from the original on October 8 2019 Retrieved April 17 2012 Endo R Hamline University Realities Rewards and Risks of Heritage Language Education Perspectives from Japanese Immigrant Parents in a Midwestern Community Bilingual Research Journal 2013 Vol 36 3 p 278 294 CITED p 279 Ronald T Takaki 1994 Issei and Nisei The Settling of Japanese America New York Chelsea House Endo R Hamline University Realities Rewards and Risks of Heritage Language Education Perspectives from Japanese Immigrant Parents in a Midwestern Community Bilingual Research Journal 2013 Vol 36 3 p 278 294 CITED p 280 日本人学校及び補習授業校の児童生徒在籍数等 平成14年4月15日現在 Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology Retrieved on March 4 2015 Includes New York New Jersey Chicago and Guam a b 私立在外教育施設一覧 Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology Retrieved on March 1 2015 北米の補習授業校一覧 平成25年4月15日現在 Archive Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology Retrieved on May 5 2014 Endo R Hamline University Realities Rewards and Risks of Heritage Language Education Perspectives from Japanese Immigrant Parents in a Midwestern Community Bilingual Research Journal 2013 Vol 36 3 p 278 294 CITED p 281 Endo Presents and Leads at Conference Archive Hamline University April 20 2012 Retrieved on March 4 2015 Endo R Hamline University Realities Rewards and Risks of Heritage Language Education Perspectives from Japanese Immigrant Parents in a Midwestern Community Bilingual Research Journal 2013 Vol 36 3 p 278 294 CITED p 282 Asian Americans A Mosaic of Faiths Pew Research Center Pew Research Center July 19 2012 Archived from the original on July 16 2013 Retrieved April 28 2019 Niiya Brian 1993 Japanese American History An A To Z Reference from 1868 to the Present VNR AG p 28 ISBN 978 0 8160 2680 7 Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved October 16 2015 Sugimura Tsukasa A History of the OMS Holiness Church of North America Education and Publication Committee of the OMS Holiness Church of North America 1993 Hillerbrand Hans Joachim 2004 The Encyclopedia of Protestantism Taylor amp Francis p 197 ISBN 978 0 203 48431 9 Archived from the original on April 27 2016 Retrieved October 16 2015 Orsi Robert A 1999 Gods of the City Religion and the American Urban Landscape Indiana UP p 299 ISBN 0 253 21276 6 Archived from the original on April 30 2016 Retrieved October 16 2015 Lobe Jim September 16 2004 Asian Americans lean toward Kerry AsiaTimes Archived from the original on June 28 2011 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Wong Junn Lee Ramakrishnan Janelle Jane Taeku S Karthick Race Based Considerations and the Obama Vote PDF 2008 National Asian American Survey Archived from the original PDF on July 3 2012 Retrieved June 5 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 2012 AAPI Post Election Survey with AAJC APALC APIAVote PDF National Asian American Survey April 5 2013 Retrieved May 12 2021 Ramakrishnan Karthick May 16 2017 2016 Post Election National Asian American Survey PDF Retrieved May 12 2021 2020 Asian American Voter Survey PDF September 15 2020 Retrieved May 12 2021 Asian American Decisions American Election Eve Poll 2020 The American Election Eve Poll Archived from the original on January 15 2021 Retrieved September 21 2021 Genetics of the Metabolic Syndrome in Japanese Americans Full Text View ClinicalTrials gov clinicaltrials gov Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved December 5 2016 Zhong S Sharp D S Grove J S Bruce C Yano K Curb J D Tall A R June 15 1996 Increased coronary heart disease in Japanese American men with mutation in the cholesteryl ester transfer protein gene despite increased HDL levels Journal of Clinical Investigation 97 12 2917 2923 doi 10 1172 JCI118751 ISSN 0021 9738 PMC 507389 PMID 8675707 Austin Melissa A April 1 2002 Ethical issues in human genome epidemiology a case study based on the Japanese American Family Study in Seattle Washington American Journal of Epidemiology 155 7 585 592 doi 10 1093 aje 155 7 585 ISSN 0002 9262 PMID 11914185 a b Felando August Medina Harold Winter 2012 The Origins of California High Seas Tuna Fleet PDF Journal of San Diego History San Diego History Center 58 1 Archived PDF from the original on July 21 2014 Retrieved April 6 2015 Western Canner and Packer Miller Freeman Publications of California 1922 p 36 Archived from the original on June 9 2016 Retrieved October 16 2015 Smith Andrew F 2012 American Tuna The Rise and Fall of an Improbable Food University of California Press pp 63 69 ISBN 978 0 520 26184 6 Access date October 16 2015 Archive date for page 63 May 27 2016 Archive URL for page 63 URL status live San Diego Marine Construction San Diego CA Shipbuilding History June 27 2014 Archived from the original on April 8 2015 Retrieved April 6 2015 Priolo Gary P February 14 2014 YP 264 NavSource Naval History Archived from the original on April 8 2015 Retrieved April 6 2015 A Marker of the Past a Warning for the Future The Argonaut Newspaper May 4 2017 Archived from the original on May 4 2017 Retrieved May 7 2017 Blackmore Willy Top 10 Japanese Noodles Shops in Torrance Archived June 10 2013 at the Wayback Machine L A Weekly Retrieved on May 10 2013 a b Selvam Ashok Asian population booming in suburbs Archived July 10 2017 at the Wayback Machine Daily Herald Arlington Heights Illinois March 6 2011 Retrieved on June 19 2013 Welcome Greater Boston Japanese Language School Archived from the original on May 8 2014 Retrieved November 7 2020 マサチューセッツ西部の日本語補習校 アーモスト日本語補習校 アムハースト ノーサンプトン Stone Cal April 11 2013 State s Japanese employees increasing Observer amp Eccentric Detroit Archived from the original on April 13 2013 Retrieved May 5 2013 Stirling Stephen Japanese Americans in Fort Lee Edgewater describe frantic calls to loved ones in quake s wake Archived November 11 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Star Ledger Friday March 11 2011 Updated Saturday March 12 2011 Retrieved on June 19 2013 Besonen Julie November 23 2016 Japanese Superstore in New Jersey Offers Exotica From Katsu to Kitsch The New York Times Archived from the original on April 15 2018 Retrieved April 14 2018 Nomiyama K 2021 Opinion Nomiyama There s no honor for RI in a victory holiday based on race The Providence Journal https www providencejournal com story opinion columns 2022 08 07 opinion nomiyama theres no honor ri victory holiday based race 9876543002 Casagrande June December 2004 Holiday Heritage Orange Coast Magazine 30 12 174 176 Archived from the original on May 1 2016 Retrieved October 16 2015 Toyota built Torrance into the second largest home of Japanese Americans Now it s leaving Archived from the original on July 29 2020 Retrieved May 3 2020 Japantown Parking About Japantown Archived from the original on December 20 2009 Retrieved August 10 2011 D C region s Asian population is up 60 percent since 2000 census data show The Washington Post Archived from the original on July 18 2017 Retrieved September 1 2017 Niiya Brian 1993 Japanese American History Japanese American National Museum Los Angeles Calif VNR AG p 307 ISBN 0 8160 2680 7 Archived from the original on April 26 2016 Retrieved October 16 2015 Lu Sidney X Japanese American Migration and the Making of Model Women for Japanese Expansion in Brazil and Manchuria 1871 1945 Journal of World History vol 28 no 3 4 Dec 2017 pp 437 67 History Reference Center lpclibrary idm oclc org login url https search ebscohost com login aspx direct true amp db khh amp AN 126921043 amp site ehost live Accessed Dec 2017 Edmonston Maryland A Bridging Community Archived from the original on December 23 2019 Retrieved January 11 2020 Do Anh July 18 2017 James Kanno one of America s first Japanese American mayors and a founder of Fountain Valley dies at 91 LA Times Archived from the original on July 19 2017 Retrieved July 18 2017 New Mayor of San Jose is Japanese Milwaukee Journal Associated Press April 14 1971 Retrieved May 24 2014 permanent dead link Milestones for Women in American Politics CAWP Cawp rutgers edu June 2 2016 Archived from the original on February 11 2020 Retrieved March 16 2017 NOAA and the Preserve America Initiative preserveamerica noaa gov Archived from the original on December 8 2016 Retrieved December 22 2016 NOAA Honors Nisei with Launch of Fisheries Vessel Bell M Shimada www nvcfoundation org Archived from the original on May 10 2017 Retrieved December 22 2016 Goldstein Richard November 21 2019 Wat Misaka First Nonwhite in Modern Pro Basketball Dies at 95 The New York Times Archived from the original on November 22 2019 Retrieved November 22 2019 A Nisei in the NBA The Wat Misaka Story Hokubei com August 29 2008 Archived from the original on November 22 2008 Retrieved October 17 2009 Wertheim Jon February 11 2012 Decades before Lin s rise Misaka made history for Asian Americans Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on November 24 2019 Retrieved November 23 2019 Tennis star Naomi Osaka gives up her U S citizenship to play for Japan in Tokyo Olympics Washington Post October 10 2019 Retrieved August 30 2021 Hart Torrey July 23 2021 Naomi Osaka lights Olympic cauldron at Tokyo Opening Ceremony NBC Olympics Retrieved August 30 2021 Spencer Alexa Imani August 9 2021 Inside Naomi Osaka s Minimalist 6 9 Million Beverly Hills Mansion Black Enterprise Retrieved August 30 2021 First male Japanese American TV anchor in Los Angeles local TV News a abclocal go com Archived from the original on July 18 2018 Retrieved February 7 2017 Northern California Premiere of 99 Years of Love Rafu Shimpo April 12 2011 Archived from the original on October 10 2011 Retrieved August 23 2011 Further reading Edit Present Day Immigration with Special Reference to the Japanese Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Jan 1921 pp 1 232 online Archived August 9 2016 at the Wayback Machine 24 articles by experts mostly about California Azuma Eiichiro A History of Oregon s Issei 1880 1952 Archived November 4 2015 at the Wayback Machine Oregon Historical Quarterly Oregon Historical Society Vol 94 No 4 Winter 1993 1994 pp 315 367 Available on JStor DeWan George Learning How To Stay Japanese In America Newsday January 6 1990 PART 11 Start page NOPGCIT Easton Stanley E and Lucien Ellington Japanese Americans in Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 2 Gale 2014 pp 537 555 online Archived March 26 2021 at the Wayback Machine Hosokawa Bill 1969 Nisei the Quiet Americans New York William Morrow amp Company ISBN 978 0 688 05013 9 Inouye Karen M Changing History Competing Notions of Japanese American Experience 1942 2006 PhD dissertation Brown University 2008 Dissertation Abstracts International No DA3318331 Jacobson Matthew Frye 2000 Barbarian Virtues The United States Encounters Foreign Peoples at Home and Abroad 1876 1917 Hill and Wang ISBN 978 0 8090 1628 0 Kase Toyoshi Nisei Samurai Culture and Agency in Three Japanese American Lives PhD dissertation 2005 online Archived March 2 2016 at the Wayback Machine Kikumura Yano Akemi ed Encyclopedia of Japanese Descendants in the Americas Walnut Creek CA Rowman amp Littlefield 2002 Leong Andrew Way Early Japanese American Literature 1815 1900 in Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature 2019 online dead link Lyman Stanford M Chinatown and Little Tokyo Power Conflict and Community Among Chinese and Japanese Immigrants in America Associated Faculty Press 1986 Miyakawa Tetsuo Scott East across the Pacific historical amp sociological studies of Japanese immigration amp assimilation ABC CLIO 1972 Montero Darrel Japanese Americans Changing Patterns of Ethnic Affiliation Over Three Generations Westview Press 1980 Moulin Pierre 1993 U S Samurais in Bruyeres People of France and Japanese Americans Incredible story Hawaii CPL Editions ISBN 2 9599984 0 5 Moulin Pierre 2007 Dachau Holocaust and US Samurais Nisei Soldiers first in Dachau Authorhouse Editions ISBN 978 1 4259 3801 7 Nakano Mei T Japanese American Women Three Generations 1890 1990 Mina Press 1990 Niiya Brian ed Encyclopedia of Japanese American History An A to Z Reference from 1868 to the Present 2001 online free to borrow Takahashi Jere Nisei Sansei Shifting Japanese American Identities and Politics Temple University Press 1997 Thernstrom Stephan Orlov Ann Handlin Oscar 1980 Japanese Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups 2 ed Harvard University Press pp 561 562 ISBN 0 674 37512 2 Tsuchiya Tomoko Interracial Marriages between American Soldiers and Japanese Women at the Beginning of the Cold War Journal of American and Canadian Studies Tokyo no 29 2011 59 84 United States Census 2000 United States Census Bureau April 2000 Archived from the original on July 30 2017 Retrieved March 16 2007 In Hawaii Edit Further information Japanese in Hawaii Further reading Asato Noriko September 2005 Teaching Mikadoism The Attack on Japanese Language Schools in Hawaii California and Washington 1919 1927 Honolulu University of Hawaii Kono Hideto Sinoto Kazuko 2000 Observations of the first Japanese to Land in Hawai i PDF The Hawaiian Journal of History 34 49 62 Archived PDF from the original on March 14 2017 Retrieved February 13 2016 Kawakami Barbara F Japanese immigrant clothing in Hawaii 1885 1941 University of Hawaii Press 1995 Morgan William Pacific Gibraltar U S Japanese Rivalry over the Annexation of Hawai i 1885 1898 Naval Institute Press 2011 Morimoto Toyotomi 1997 Japanese Americans and Cultural Continuity Maintaining Language through Heritage Routledge Nordyke Eleanor C and Y Scott Matsumoto Japanese in Hawaii a Historical and Demographic Perspective 1977 online Archived February 28 2017 at the Wayback Machine Takagi Mariko 1987 Moral Education in Pre War Japanese Language Schools in Hawaii Honolulu University of Hawaii External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Japanese diaspora in the United States Japanese Americans Archive State of California Japanese American National Museum Embassy of Japan Archived February 16 2019 at the Wayback Machine in Washington DC Japanese American Citizens League Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaii Japanese Cultural amp Community Center of Northern California Japanese American Community and Cultural Center of Southern California Japanese American Historical Society Densho The Japanese American Legacy Project Japanese American Museum of San Jose California Japanese American Network Japanese American s own companies in USA Japanese American Relocation Digital Archives Archived November 25 2002 at the Wayback Machine Online Archive of the Japanese American Relocation during World War II Photo Exhibit of Japanese American community in Florida Nikkei Federation Discover Nikkei Summary of a panel discussion on changing Japanese American identities The War Fighting for Democracy Japanese Americans Archived March 10 2010 at the Wayback Machine The War Relocation Centers of World War II When Fear Was Stronger than Justice a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places TwHP lesson plan U S Government interned Japanese from Latin America Short radio episode Baseball from Lil Yokohama by Toshio Mori 1941 California Legacy Project American Life in the 20th Century in Washington State permanent dead link University of Washington Digital Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese Americans amp oldid 1144002458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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