Keyword [Japanese-Americans] Result: 1 - 20 | Page: 1 of 2 |
| 1. | The Oblivious Memory And The Buried Past |
| 2. | The Initiation Of Japanese-Americans In Kira-Kira |
| 3. | The Research On Chinese Americans And Japanese Americans In California From Mid-19th To Early 20th Century |
| 4. | Japanese Americans Identity Crisis And Reconstruction From The Perspective Of Trauma Theory |
| 5. | A Study On The Validity Of Japanese Interment During World War Ⅱ |
| 6. | Performance of Japanese Americans on selected cognitive instruments |
| 7. | Relocating authority: Japanese Americans writing to redress mass incarceration |
| 8. | From internment to 'model minority': The reintegration of Japanese Americans in United States society after World War Two |
| 9. | From a 'contagious' to a 'poisonous yellow peril'?: Japanese and Japanese Americans in public health and agriculture, 1890s--1950 |
| 10. | Campaigns by Elite Nikkei to Shape the Image of Japanese-Americans and Japan, 1900-1941 |
| 11. | Similarities and differences between Japanese and Americans on their use and perception of polite speech |
| 12. | Steps to a New World Order: Ecumenism and Racial Integration during the World War II Incarceration of Japanese Americans |
| 13. | Emotional dialecticism versus optimism: Cultural styles of emotion regulation among Chinese, Japanese, and Americans |
| 14. | Strangers in the Heartland: Cultural Identity in Flux, Japanese Americans in Chicago, 1892--1942 |
| 15. | Domestic containment: Japanese Americans, Native Americans, and the cultural politics of relocation |
| 16. | Language-use and analytic thinking across cultures |
| 17. | A study of ethnic identity of Japanese Americans: An approach from Japanese Christian churches |
| 18. | Offensive history and the Good War: The internment of Japansese Canadians and Japanese Americans in World War II |
| 19. | Double-crossing the color line: Japanese Americans in Black and White Chicago, 1945--199 |
| 20. | Comparisons among Anglo-Americans, Chinese-Americans, Japanese-Americans, and Korean-Americans in preferences for art and museum characteristics |
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