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Japanese Americans and the Racial Uniform

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Honorable Mention, 2025 AAAS Book Awards: Social Sciences CategoryHow race continues to shape the citizenship and everyday lives of later-generation JapaneseAmericansJapanese Americans are seen as ...
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  • 15 August 2023
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Honorable Mention, 2025 AAAS Book Awards: Social Sciences Category

How race continues to shape the citizenship and everyday lives of later-generation Japanese
Americans


Japanese Americans are seen as the “model minority,” a group that has fully assimilated and excelled within the US. Yet third- and fourth-generation Japanese Americans continue to report feeling marginalized within the predominantly white communities they call home. Japanese Americans and the Racial Uniform explores this apparent contradiction, challenging the way society understands the role of race in social and cultural integration.

To explore race and the everyday practices of citizenship, Dana Y. Nakano begins at an unlikely site, Japanese Village and Deer Park, a now defunct Japan-themed amusement park in suburban Southern California. Drawing from extensive interviews with the park’s Japanese American employees as well as photographic imagery, Nakano shows how the employees' race acted as part of their work uniform and magnified their sense of alienation from their white peers and the park’s white visitors. While the racial perception of Japanese Americans as forever foreigners made them ideal employees for Deer Park, the same stigma continues to marginalizes Japanese Americans beyond the place and time of the amusement park. Into the present day, third and fourth generation Japanese Americans share feelings of racialized non-belonging and yearning for community. Japanese Americans and the Racial Uniform pushes us to rethink the persistent recognition of racial markers—the racial body as a visible, ever-present uniform—and how it continues to impact claims on an American identity and the lived experience of citizenship.

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Price: $23.00
Publisher: NYU Press
Imprint: NYU Press
Series: Asian American Sociology
Publication Date: 15 August 2023
ISBN: 9781479816392
Format: eBook
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / Asian Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / Asian American Studies
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What are the limits to how assimilated and welcomed groups can become? How far do race and racism stretch to shape the lives of people who have been here for generations and identify as full Americans? Nakano deftly gets at these key questions through this easy-to-read, well-researched book on Japanese Americans in Southern California. It offers a necessary lens into how culture, race, and nationalism intersect in present-day America.
Dana Y. Nakano is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology, Gerontology, and Gender Studies at California State University, Stanislaus, and co-editor of Japanese American Millennials: Rethinking Generation, Community, and Diversity.