During the war, society tended to exaggerate national security measures by classifying foreigners and immigrants as a threat. During the Second World War, many families were torn as they were Japanese Americans. An excerpt from Julie's 'When Emperor is Holy' explains the traumatic event experienced by a little boy and how his innocent heart is about dealing with the loss of his father's pain. Through such literary techniques like images, symbols and words, the slogan once again tells the boy's enthusiasm for feeling the false hope of the existence of his father.
Since the Japanese Americans experienced the effects of American racial discrimination and foreign phobia, the complexity of mixed identity is reflected in Julie Otsuka's "Emperor's Holy." Daxie's novel is exploring the effects of many of the racial discrimination and foreign phobia experienced by Japanese Americans as a result of presidential order 9066, which President Wrocław served as president. Most characters do not suffer direct physical violence due to detention, but fathers are exploring other pain, from expelling their families to losing various positions.
When the emperor was sacred, a historical novel was written by an American writer Julie Ducsie about the Japanese American family sent to the desert camp of the Utah desert during the Second World War. This novel is based on the wartime experience of Otsuka's mother's family, is based on the view of the four families, and details the expulsion from California and the time in camps. This was the first novel by Daxie and was published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf in 2002. In "When the Emperor is Holy," the author Julie did a fictional review of the Japanese American experience during the Second World War. Tell this story to the Japanese American family's family, father, mother, son, and daughter. The family is still anonymous, giving the story a universal quality. The novel is divided into five parts, each being explained from the perspective of a different family.
The first novel "The Emperor is in Shinju" is the story of a Japanese American family forced to live in the camp during World War II. In five concise chapters, Daxie introduced each family's view and created an intimate and detailed life with one of the darkest and most embarrassing periods in the United States: over 110,000 Japanese Americans It was detained for 3-1 / 2 years. Her story develops in this tragic age in the history of the United States, but the style of ruthless Amnesty International robs the character's core and creates a powerful story of exile and racial discrimination. She wrote, "I would like to write a novel about real people, but their experience is universal not only for Japanese Americans but also for all peoples, historically people have been rounded up. Was done