Satsuki Ina: The Poet and the Silk Girl
The Poet and the Silk Girl
Buch
- A Memoir of Love, Imprisonment, and Protest
Erscheint bald
Lassen Sie sich über unseren eCourier benachrichtigen, sobald das Produkt bestellt werden kann.
Lassen Sie sich über unseren eCourier benachrichtigen, sobald das Produkt bestellt werden kann.
- Heyday Books, 09/2025
- Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
- Sprache: Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781597146968
- Umfang: 320 Seiten
- Erscheinungstermin: 9.9.2025
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Ähnliche Artikel
Klappentext
Now in paperback: A compelling and prismatic love story of one family's defiance in the face of injustice—and how their story echoes across generations."Beautifully woven together by Satsuki Ina's mother's diary and her father's haiku—through which they are both still speaking—[this] is memoir as healing, as self- and soul-determination, and as vigilance, the keeping vigil over past lives that are still becoming." —Brandon Shimoda, author of The Afterlife Is Letting Go
In 1942 newlyweds Itaru and Shizuko Ina were settling into married life when the United States government upended their world. They were forcibly removed from their home and incarcerated in wartime American concentration camps solely on account of their Japanese ancestry. When the Inas, under duress, renounced their American citizenship, the War Department branded them enemy aliens and scattered their family across the U. S. interior. Born to Itaru and Shizuko during their imprisonment, psychotherapist and activist Satsuki Ina weaves their story together in this moving mosaic. Through diary entries, photographs, clandestine letters, and heart-wrenching haiku, she reveals how this intrepid young couple navigated life, love, loss, and loyalty tests in the welter of World War II-era hysteria.
The Poet and the Silk Girl illustrates through one family's saga the generational struggle of Japanese Americans who resisted racist oppression, fought for the restoration of their rights, and clung to their full humanity in the face of adversity. With psychological insight, Ina excavates the unmentionable, recovering a chronicle of resilience amidst one of the severest blows to American civil liberties. As she traces the legacies of trauma, she connects her family's ordeal to modern-day mass incarceration at the U. S.-Mexico border. Lyrical and gripping, this cautionary tale implores us to prevent the repetition of atrocity, pairing healing and protest with galvanizing power.