The Immigration Nerds Talk About Identity, Loyalty, and Nationalism during Wartime

In this week’s Immigration Nerds episode, we talk to University of Illinois-Chicago history professor and author Michael R. Jin. His latest book, Citizens, Immigrants, and the Stateless: A Japanese American Diaspora in the Pacific, captures the stories of more than 50,000 U.S.-born Japanese Americans and their journeys across the U.S. and Japan pre and post-WWII.

In our talk, as in his book, Jin explains the actions taken to combat anti-Japanese sentiment throughout wartime, the opportunities and obstacles presented by two influential and contrasting powers, and ultimately, how artists, creatives, and intellectuals helped reconcile notions of transpacific identity and loyalty.

 

SHARE THIS