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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Eric L. MullerPublisher: The University of North Carolina Press Imprint: The University of North Carolina Press Dimensions: Width: 24.80cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 22.60cm Weight: 0.498kg ISBN: 9781469666167ISBN 10: 1469666162 Pages: 136 Publication Date: 30 August 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsInjustice, in Kodachrome. - The New York Times Sheds new light on life in Wyoming's Heart Mountain internment camp. . . . Disarming. . . . [Manbo's] images show movement and smiles caught in a moment. The people do not perform because of his camera but in spite of it. - Casper Star-Tribune These images offer readers glimpses of the internment that are in vivid color and, unlike government- sanctioned photos, candid and earnest. . . .Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. - Choice [A] provocative and noteworthy collection. . . . [with] unquestionable cultural and historical significance. - Publishers Weekly A rare insider's view of daily life in [Japanese-American internment] camps. - Durham Herald Sun These portraits provide a stark reminder that the families of Heart Mountain were prisoners of war. - NPR Online The strength of this title is the photography: Manbo documents a people who rose above persecution and injustice to carry on traditions and form a community in a barren landscape. Anyone interested in documentary photography and American social and cultural history will appreciate this book. Highly recommended. - Library Journal starred review The narratives and scholarly essays combine with the photos to forge a powerful statement. As humans we see the world in color, so the Kodachrome images convey the circumstances, as we would experience them if we were there. This level of reality is something that existing black and white camp photos cannot duplicate. - American Studies Journal Muller recognized this power of color photography to revive the past and has created a book that presents the internee experience through a modern lens. Just as Manbo's slides were miraculously preserved (in a box in his son's garage), Muller's compilation will help preserve our collective memory of the internment experience. - Hyphen: Asian America Unabridged Stunning. - Huffington Post The collection of pictures [Manbo] took there. . . represent a singular view of internment, all executed in color. - Los Angeles Times Poignant images of pickup baseball, judo matches, parades, and other daily life in a Wyoming internment camp for Japanese Americans during World War II. - Military History Quarterly Showcas[es] 65 color images from [Bill Manbo's] rare collection. . . . Each of the essays helps the reader look at the photographs from a different perspective. - Carolina Law The photographs give a haunting account of what life was like for Japanese descents. - Daily Mail Online This is a testament to the incredible power of photography. Even one frame can change the tide of public opinion because photography has the power to add layers to our understanding of how events transpired and how people were affected. - Washington Post These are not pictures of horrors of confinement but rather photos that show how the Japanese made lives for themselves. - Denver Post This volume is at once a wonderful and rare addition . . . to the existing images of the Nikkei experience while incarcerated during World War II. - Nichi Bei Weekly The collection of pictures [Manbo] took there. . . represent a singular view of internment, all executed in color.--Los Angeles Times The narratives and scholarly essays combine with the photos to forge a powerful statement. As humans we see the world in color, so the Kodachrome images convey the circumstances, as we would experience them if we were there. This level of reality is something that existing black and white camp photos cannot duplicate.--American Studies Journal These portraits provide a stark reminder that the families of Heart Mountain were prisoners of war.--NPR Online [A] provocative and noteworthy collection. . . . [with] unquestionable cultural and historical significance.--Publishers Weekly Injustice, in Kodachrome.--The New York Times Stunning.--Huffington Post The photographs give a haunting account of what life was like for Japanese descents.--Daily Mail Online The strength of this title is the photography: Manbo documents a people who rose above persecution and injustice to carry on traditions and form a community in a barren landscape. Anyone interested in documentary photography and American social and cultural history will appreciate this book. Highly recommended.--Library Journal starred review These images offer readers glimpses of the internment that are in vivid color and, unlike government- sanctioned photos, candid and earnest. . . .Highly recommended. All levels/libraries.--Choice This is a testament to the incredible power of photography. Even one frame can change the tide of public opinion because photography has the power to add layers to our understanding of how events transpired and how people were affected.--Washington Post [A] provocative and noteworthy collection. . . . [with] unquestionable cultural and historical significance.--Publishers Weekly A rare insider's view of daily life in [Japanese-American internment] camps.--Durham Herald Sun Injustice, in Kodachrome.--The New York Times Muller recognized this power of color photography to revive the past and has created a book that presents the internee experience through a modern lens. Just as Manbo's slides were miraculously preserved (in a box in his son's garage), Muller's compilation will help preserve our collective memory of the internment experience.--Hyphen: Asian America Unabridged Poignant images of pickup baseball, judo matches, parades, and other daily life in a Wyoming internment camp for Japanese Americans during World War II.--Military History Quarterly Sheds new light on life in Wyoming's Heart Mountain internment camp. . . . Disarming. . . . [Manbo's] images show movement and smiles caught in a moment. The people do not perform because of his camera but in spite of it.--Casper Star-Tribune Showcas[es] 65 color images from [Bill Manbo's] rare collection. . . . Each of the essays helps the reader look at the photographs from a different perspective.--Carolina Law Stunning.--Huffington Post The collection of pictures [Manbo] took there. . . represent a singular view of internment, all executed in color.--Los Angeles Times The narratives and scholarly essays combine with the photos to forge a powerful statement. As humans we see the world in color, so the Kodachrome images convey the circumstances, as we would experience them if we were there. This level of reality is something that existing black and white camp photos cannot duplicate.--American Studies Journal The photographs give a haunting account of what life was like for Japanese descents.--Daily Mail Online The strength of this title is the photography: Manbo documents a people who rose above persecution and injustice to carry on traditions and form a community in a barren landscape. Anyone interested in documentary photography and American social and cultural history will appreciate this book. Highly recommended.--Library Journal starred review These are not pictures of horrors of confinement but rather photos that show how the Japanese made lives for themselves.--Denver Post These images offer readers glimpses of the internment that are in vivid color and, unlike government- sanctioned photos, candid and earnest. . . .Highly recommended. All levels/libraries.--Choice These portraits provide a stark reminder that the families of Heart Mountain were prisoners of war.--NPR Online This is a testament to the incredible power of photography. Even one frame can change the tide of public opinion because photography has the power to add layers to our understanding of how events transpired and how people were affected.--Washington Post This volume is at once a wonderful and rare addition . . . to the existing images of the Nikkei experience while incarcerated during World War II.--Nichi Bei Weekly Author InformationEric L. Muller is Dan K. Moore Distinguished Professor in Jurisprudence and Ethics at the University of North Carolina School of Law and director of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Center for Faculty Excellence. He is author of American Inquisition: The Hunt for Japanese American Disloyalty in World War II and Free to Die for Their Country: The Story of the Japanese American Draft Resisters in World War II. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |