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Resource type: Web Article Language: en: English Peer reviewed BibTeX citation key: Beadling2010 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "Citizen 13660", Autobiography, Didactics, Interculturalism, Japan, Okubo. Miné, Randformen des Comics, USA Creators: Beadling Collection: SANE journal |
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Attachments | URLs http://digitalcomm ... u/sane/vol1/iss1/5 |
Abstract |
Although Miné Okubo is an American citizen and the events she records in Citizen 13660 took place on American soil, this essay will argue that her work is nevertheless a work of the contact zone. Furthermore, Okubo’s record of the internment of 120,000 Japanese Americans during World War II can be usefully read and taught as an autoethnography that constructs a counterhistory of World War II. The juxtaposition of Okubo’s autobiographical record of her internment experience with a variety of “official” images can help students learn about the construction of knowledge. Such classroom work can help students “decolonize knowledge,” to borrow a phrase from Mary Louise Pratt, by demonstrating how knowledge is not neutral but is instead constructed by constituencies with a vested interested in how events are depicted.
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