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When the Emperor Was Divine

2024-03-03 09:55:55

A wonderful book on the experience of Japan and the US after the Pearl Harbor attack is the FBI interrogation from the dawn's father, the mothers and children's detention at the Utah camp, and finally through the unknown family experiences of their names I told them. Three and a half years later, I returned to my house in Berkeley, California. The last chapter is my father's "confession".

In 2002 the history novel by Japanese history writer Julie "Emperor is holy" was published. This is a novel that is located at the boundary between novels and novels and records the experiences of Japanese families at the camp. Second World War. The book can be divided into five unbalanced parts: "evacuation order 19", "train", "when the emperor is holy", "backyard of strangers", and "repentance". Narrative mode in a distant third party where characters are not referenced by name. The fourth part is a common view of brothers and sisters. The last part is only a few pages long, it turns into a first person story

Another novel by Julie, "Buddha in the attic" can be seen as the first part when the emperor became sacred. It follows a group of women who emigrated from Japan to the United States as a "picture bride." This novel explores the material, cultural and psychological aspects of their struggle to assimilate and adapt to life in the United States. After spending decades in their hometown, they gave up their houses and were forced to go to the emperor when they did the same camp. Ogazan of Ogawa Hisaki is another fictitious novel concerning detention. When the emperor became sacred, it avoided the melodrama and turned to the original internal organs.

It is level. The appointed emperor, or the king, is dominated by divinity and inheritance. The emperor is believed to be a direct descendant of the gods. Therefore, breaking this divinity is blasphemic. Because the emperor is not knocked down, the Japanese believes this, his position is primarily symbolic, he depicts a state of paralysis. Although power is limited, all major power laws such as Mr. Fujiwara's and Mr. Hojo's board of directors respect all emperors of Namoto, Ashikaga and General Tokugawa.

When the emperor is sacred, a useful accompaniment is a picture of Henry Sugimoto, and some of them have been annotated in this database. Sugimoto was a Japanese artist born in Japan and was an Arkansas intern during the war. His camping and camp life paintings portray vividly destructive environments and destruction of family life.