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Strangers in the Ethnic Homeland [Paperback]

Takeyuki Tsuda (Author)

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Book Description

March 15, 2003 0231128398 978-0231128391

Since the late 1980s, Brazilians of Japanese descent have been "return" migrating to Japan as unskilled foreign workers. With an immigrant population currently estimated at roughly 280,000, Japanese Brazilians are now the second largest group of foreigners in Japan. Although they are of Japanese descent, most were born in Brazil and are culturally Brazilian. As a result, they have become Japan's newest ethnic minority.

Drawing upon close to two years of multisite fieldwork in Brazil and Japan, Takeyuki Tsuda has written a comprehensive ethnography that examines the ethnic experiences and reactions of both Japanese Brazilian immigrants and their native Japanese hosts. In response to their socioeconomic marginalization in their ethnic homeland, Japanese Brazilians have strengthened their Brazilian nationalist sentiments despite becoming members of an increasingly well-integrated transnational migrant community. Although such migrant nationalism enables them to resist assimilationist Japanese cultural pressures, its challenge to Japanese ethnic attitudes and ethnonational identity remains inherently contradictory. Strangers in the Ethnic Homeland illuminates how cultural encounters caused by transnational migration can reinforce local ethnic identities and nationalist discourses.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

A thorough job of scholarship. However, what makes this lively reading is Tsuda's description about the lives of immigrants and the Japanese who interacted with them.

(Chizu Omori Pacific Reader 3/1/05)

...encyclopedic, and for anyone venturing on a serious study of the Brazilian Nikkeijin in Japan in the future, it will be a resource bible.

(Daniela DeCarvalho Journal of Japanese Studies )

Strangers in the Ethnic Homeland raises important questions that urge us to think about ethnic and national identities in new ways.

(Aya Ezawa American Journal of Sociology )

Review

This is the book all of us interested in the comparative study of immigration have been waiting for. It is a masterpiece work of exquisite ethnographic detail, theoretical excellence, and conceptual maturity written by a cosmopolitan intellectual. Tsuda's ethnographic empathy, uncanny sense for place and mood, and well-channeled interdisciplinary impulses suggests to me that this book will set the standard for all subsequent anthropological work on immigration in Japan.

(Marcelo M. Suarez-Orozco, Victor S. Thomas Professor of Education at Harvard and co-director of the Harvard Immigration Projects )

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
IT WAS AN AUTUMN DAY in September when I stepped off the train into the scorching heat after a three-hour trip from central Tokyo to Ota city in Gunma Prefecture. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
labor broker firms, nikkeijin dekasegi, nikkeijin children, nikkeijin informants, nikkeijin workers, few nikkeijin, nikkeijin immigrants, other nikkeijin, ethnic return migrants, nikkeijin return migrants, nikkeijin return migration, puxa saco, ura self, honne feelings, transnational ethnic affinity, migrant nationalism, nikkeijin community, nikkeijin migrants, deterritorialized nationalism, low social class status, noncontiguous space, return migrated, nikkei burajirujin, nikkeijin communities, dekasegi rodosha
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Japanese Brazilians, United States, Glick Schiller, First World, Sdo Paulo, Japan Institute of Labor, Third World, Japanese American, Porto Alegre, World War, Capuano de Oliveira, International Press, Japanese Peruvians, Centro de Estudos, Moreira da Rocha, Transnational Communities Without, Arjun Appadurai, Japan Statistics Research Institute, South American, Aichi Prefecture, Frantz Fanon, Gunma Prefecture, Japanese of Japan, Korean Japanese, Latin American
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