Letters to Memory

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Cultural Studies, Ethnic Studies, History, Americas, United States, 20th Century, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Letters to Memory by Karen Tei Yamashita, Coffee House Press
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Author: Karen Tei Yamashita ISBN: 9781566894982
Publisher: Coffee House Press Publication: September 5, 2017
Imprint: Coffee House Press Language: English
Author: Karen Tei Yamashita
ISBN: 9781566894982
Publisher: Coffee House Press
Publication: September 5, 2017
Imprint: Coffee House Press
Language: English

An excursion through the Japanese-American internment using archival materials from the author’s own family.

In this unique memoir, Karen Tei Yamashita draws on her family’s history and creates a series of epistolary conversations with composite characters representing a range of academic specialties. Historians, anthropologists, classicists—their disciplines, and Yamashita’s engagement with them, are a way for her explore various aspects of the internment and to expand its meaning beyond her family, and our borders, to ideas of debt, forgiveness, civil rights, and community. From a National Book Award finalist, Letters to Memory is “in moments deeply personal and impressionistic and in moments pulling back into a voice of epic omniscience” (The Boston Globe).

“Interrogates the cruelty of internment and the random nature of immigration, war, birth and death and disease through her own probing, lively correspondence . . . The irony and dark humor of Yamashita’s interrogations, of her nimble prose and sentences, illuminate the tragedies.” —Los Angeles Times

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

An excursion through the Japanese-American internment using archival materials from the author’s own family.

In this unique memoir, Karen Tei Yamashita draws on her family’s history and creates a series of epistolary conversations with composite characters representing a range of academic specialties. Historians, anthropologists, classicists—their disciplines, and Yamashita’s engagement with them, are a way for her explore various aspects of the internment and to expand its meaning beyond her family, and our borders, to ideas of debt, forgiveness, civil rights, and community. From a National Book Award finalist, Letters to Memory is “in moments deeply personal and impressionistic and in moments pulling back into a voice of epic omniscience” (The Boston Globe).

“Interrogates the cruelty of internment and the random nature of immigration, war, birth and death and disease through her own probing, lively correspondence . . . The irony and dark humor of Yamashita’s interrogations, of her nimble prose and sentences, illuminate the tragedies.” —Los Angeles Times

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