Banner for The Odyssey Bookshop: Floyd Cheung

The Odyssey Bookshop: Floyd Cheung

by

Gatherings & Meetings First Year Calendar Junior Calendar Senior Calendar Sophomore Calendar

Thu, May 23, 2024

7 PM – 8 PM EDT (GMT-4)

The Odyssey Bookshop

9 College Street, South Hadley, MA 01075, United States

Registration

Register

Details

Join us on Thursday, May 23 at 7 PM as Floyd Cheung talks about The Literature of Japanese American Incarceration, a new Penguin Classic anthology edited by him.

About the Book

The collective voice of Japanese Americans defined by a specific moment in time: the four years of World War II during which the US government expelled resident aliens and its own citizens from their homes and imprisoned 125,000 of them in American concentration camps, based solely upon the race they shared with a wartime enemy.

This anthology presents a new vision that recovers and reframes the literature produced by the people targeted by the actions of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Congress to deny Americans of Japanese ancestry any individual hearings or other due process after the Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor. From nearly seventy selections of fiction, poetry, essays, memoirs, and letters emerges a shared story of the struggle to retain personal integrity in the face of increasing dehumanization – all anchored by the key government documents that incite the action.

The selections favor the pointed over the poignant, and the unknown over the familiar, with several new translations among previously unseen works that have been long overlooked on the shelf, buried in the archives, or languished unread in the Japanese language. The writings are presented chronologically so that readers can trace the continuum of events as the incarcerees experienced it.

The contributors span incarcerees, their children born in or soon after the camps, and their descendants who reflect on the long-term consequences of mass incarceration for themselves and the nation. Many of the voices are those of protest. Some are those of accommodation. All are authentic. Together they form an epic narrative with a singular vision of America’s past, one with disturbing resonances with the American present.

About Floyd Cheung

Floyd Cheung is a professor of English at Smith College. He has edited several books including the Penguin Classics edition of H.T. Tsiang’s The Hanging on Union Square, and is co-editor of The Oxford Encyclopedia of Asian American Literature and Culture, and John Okada: The Life and Rediscovered Work of the Author of No-No Boy.

Hosted By

Office of Student Involvement | Website | View More Events

The Odyssey Bookshop

Contact the organizers