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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/902988672

History and memory

After Pearl Harbor Attack in 1941, 100,000 Japanese living in the States were asked to move to a concentration camp. With family stories and some documentaries, Tajiri describes haunting impacts of this ordeal on American Japanese for generations thereafter.

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http://schema.org/about

http://schema.org/alternateName

  • "For Akiko and Takashige"@en
  • "History and memory"
  • "History & memory"@en
  • "History & memory"
  • "Electronic Arts Intermix presents History and memory"@en

http://schema.org/description

  • "After Pearl Harbor Attack in 1941, 100,000 Japanese living in the States were asked to move to a concentration camp. With family stories and some documentaries, Tajiri describes haunting impacts of this ordeal on American Japanese for generations thereafter."@en
  • ""Groundbreaking and haunting, this film is a poetic composition of recorded history and non-recorded memory. Filmmaker Rea Tajiri's family was among the 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans who were imprisoned in internment camps after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Ruminating on the difficult nature of representing the past -- especially a past that exists outside traditional historic accounts -- Tajiri blends interviews, memorabilia, a pilgrimage to the camp where her mother was interned, and the story of her father, who had been drafted pre-Pearl Harbor and returned to find his family's house removed from its site. "--Publisher."@en
  • "After Pearl Harbor Attack in 1941, 100,000 Japanese living in the States were asked to move to a concentration camp. With family stories and documentaries, videomaker Tajiri describes haunting impacts of this ordeal on American Japanese for generations thereafter."
  • "Using documentary footage and clips from feature films, this video explores the memories of Japanese-Americans interned during World War II."@en
  • "Tells the story of the filmmaker's search for her family's history and experience as Japanese Americans during the Second World War."@en
  • "Tells the story of the filmmaker's search for her family's history and experience as Japanese Americans during the Second World War."
  • "After the Pearl Harbor Attack in 1941, 100,000 Japanese living in the United States were forced to move to concentration camps. With family stories and some documentaries, videomaker Tajiri describes the haunting impacts of this ordeal on American Japanese for generations thereafter."
  • "After Pearl Harbor Attack in 1941, 100,000 Japanese living in the States were asked to move to a concentration camp. With family stories and some documentaries, videomaker Tajiri describes haunting impacts of this ordeal on American Japanese for generations thereafter."@en
  • "After Pearl Harbor Attack in 1941, 100,000 Japanese living in the States were asked to move to a concentration camp. With family stories and some documentaries, videomaker Tajiri describes haunting impacts of this ordeal on American Japanese for generations thereafter."
  • "After the Pearl harbor attack in 1941, 100,000 Japanese living in the United States were asked to move to concentrations camps. With family stories and some documentaries, videomaker Tajiri describes haunting impacts of this ordeal on American Japanese for generations afterwards."
  • "After the Pearl Harbor Attack in 1941, 100,000 Japanese living in the United States were forced to move to concentration camps. With family stories and some documentaries, videographer Tajiri describes the haunting impacts of this ordeal on American Japanese for generations thereafter."
  • "Focusing on the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, this powerful and poignant work examines the rewriting of history through media representation. In a pastiche of film images, written text, voiceover and video, Tajiri interweaves collective history and personal memory. The attack on Pearl Harbor is seen through anonymous archival footage, Hollywood's From Here to Eternity, a filmed re-staging and a news report. The Japanese-American internment is similarly reconstructed."@en
  • "Groundbreaking and haunting, this film is a poetic composition of recorded history and non-recorded memory. Filmmaker Rea Tajiri's family was among the 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans who were imprisoned in internment camps after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Ruminating on the difficult nature of representing the past -- especially a past that exists outside traditional historic accounts -- Tajiri blends interviews, memorabilia, a pilgrimage to the camp where her mother was interned, and the story of her father, who had been drafted pre-Pearl Harbor and returned to find his family's house removed from its site."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Documentary films"@en
  • "History"@en
  • "History"
  • "Documentary"
  • "Short films"@en
  • "Film clips"@en
  • "Nonfiction films"@en
  • "Biographical films"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "History & memory"
  • "History and memory"@en
  • "History and memory"
  • "History and memory for(Akiko and Takashige)"@en
  • "History and memory for Akiko and Takashige"@en
  • "History and memory for Akiko and Takashige"
  • "History and memory (for Akiko and Takeshige)"@en
  • "History and memory (for Akiko and Takashige)"@en
  • "History and memory (for Akiko and Takashige)"
  • "History and memory (for Akiko and takashige)"
  • "History and memory : (for Akiko and Takashige)"@en