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Transborder Los Angeles

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Focusing on Los Angeles farmland during the years between the Immigration Act of 1924 and the Japanese Internment in 1942, Transborder Los Angeles weaves together the narratives of Mexican and Japa...
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  • 18 October 2022
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Focusing on Los Angeles farmland during the years between the Immigration Act of 1924 and the Japanese Internment in 1942, Transborder Los Angeles weaves together the narratives of Mexican and Japanese immigrants into a single transpacific history. In this book, Yu Tokunaga moves from international relations between Japan, Mexico, and the US to the Southern California farmland, where ethnic Japanese and Mexicans played a significant role in developing local agriculture, one of the major industries of LA County before World War II. Japanese, Mexicans, and white Americans developed a unique triracial hierarchy in farmland that generated both conflict and interethnic accommodation by bringing together local issues and international concerns beyond the Pacific Ocean and the US-Mexico border. Viewing these experiences in a single narrative form, Tokunaga breaks new ground, demonstrating the close relationships between the ban on Japanese immigration, Mexican farmworkers' strikes, wartime Japanese removal, and the Bracero Program. 
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Price: $95.00
Pages: 274
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Series: Western Histories
Publication Date: 18 October 2022
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520379787
Format: Hardcover
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"Tokunaga’s book, by drawing on multiple languages and emphasizing the fluidity and dynamism in the construction of race, ethnicity, and national boundaries between Japan, Mexico, and the United States, offers more than enough to think about in terms of transnational histories of Japanese America."
Yu Tokunaga is Associate Professor of History at the Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies with a joint appointment at the Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Japan. 
Contents

List of Illustrations and Tables
Acknowledgments

Introduction: Exploring Japanese-Mexican Relations in Los Angeles and the US-Mexico
Borderlands

1. The 1924 Immigration Act and Its Unintended Consequence in the US-Mexico Borderlands
2. The Deepening of Japanese-Mexican Relations in Triracial Los Angeles
3. Transpacific Borderlands: Japanese Farmers and Mexican Workers in the 1933 
    El Monte Berry Strike
4. Ethnic Solidarity or Interethnic Accommodation: The 1936 Venice Celery Strike
5. Japanese Internment as an Agricultural Labor Crisis: Wartime Debates over 
    Food Security versus Military Necessity
6. Enduring Interethnic Trust in Rancho San Pedro
Conclusion

Notes
Bibliography
Index