Racialized Citizenship in the American and Japanese Empires

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Tuesday, March 21st, 2023

DateTimeLocation
Tuesday, March 21, 20233:00PM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 208N, The event will take place in room 208N, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto.
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Description

The event will feature the following two presentations:

 

Transpacific Subjectivities: Okinawan Nisei in Hawaii and Militarization of the Pacific

By Asako Masubuchi

 

Abstract:

This paper examines the transpacific life course of Thomas Taro Higa to explore the shifting identities of Okinawan nisei in Hawaii during and after World War II. By doing so, this paper reveals how the indeterminate status of Okinawa under the U.S. military occupation shaped the distinctive consciousness and identities of the Okinawan diaspora in Hawaii.

 

Higa was a so-called “kibei nisei,” born in Hawaii to Okinawan parents and returned to Hawaii after receiving his education in Okinawa and working briefly in Osaka and Tokyo. During World War II, Higa served with the all-Nisei 100th Infantry Battalion. Immediately after the war, Higa organized the Okinawa Relief Movement to send relief goods to war-devastated Okinawa. In many ways, Higa was at the nexus of Japanese Americans who were trying to restore their status as American citizens and Okinawan immigrants who were building up their ethnic identity through the act of saving their homeland Okinawa. Through examining Higa’s life experiences within the context of the Cold War, occupation of Okinawa, and postwar Japanese Americans’ efforts for citizenship, this paper aims to rethink postwar Okinawa from a transpacific perspective.

 

Dr. Asako Masubuchi is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Policy Studies at Doshisha University, Kyoto. She holds a Ph.D. in East Asian Studies from the University of Toronto. Her research focuses on the questions of militarism, racism, and biopolitics in U.S.-occupied Okinawa. Her works include “Stamping Out the ‘Nation-Ruining Disease’: Anti-Tuberculosis Campaign in US-Occupied Okinawa” (Social History of Medicine, Vol. 34, Issue 4, November 2021).   

 

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Nation and Nationality as a White "Possessions" in Japan and the United States

By Michael Roellinghoff

 

Abstract:

In this paper, I discuss early 20th century Japanese critiques of Asian exclusion laws in Anglophone settler colonies. Intellectuals such as Mori Ōgai, Nagai Ryūtarō, and Ōkuma Shigenobu understood Asian exclusionism and European imperialism in Asia as constituting a single "white peril” which threatened all of Asia. At a time when Japan’s “Great Power” status seemed to signify Euro-American recognition of the Japanese Empire as an equal partner, Asian exclusionism marked the tangible limits of Japan’s acceptance into the international community. Arguing that this reflected a larger dynamic — well understood by Westernizing Meiji reformers — according to which Euro-Americans claimed sovereignty, civilization, and the nation-state formation itself as exclusively white "possessions," I analyze “white peril” critiques together with attempts by Japanese immigrants in the United States to "pass" as (the supposedly "Caucasian") Ainu in order to bypass exclusion laws and naturalize as US citizens.

 

Dr. Michael Roellinghoff (he/him) is a historian specializing in Indigeneity, colonialism, and race in modern Japan. He is currently an Associate at the University of Toronto Asian Institute and a Research Fellow at the University of Alberta.

 


Speakers

Asako Masubuchi
Speaker
Assistant Professor, Department of Policy Studies, Doshisha University, Kyoto

Michael Roellinghoff
Speaker
Associate at the University of Toronto's Asian Institute; Research Fellow, University of Alberta.

Takashi Fujitani
Chair
Dr. David Chu Chair in Asia-Pacific Studies, Professor of History, and Director of the Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies, University of Toronto


Main Sponsor

Asian Institute

Sponsors

Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies


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