My Book is OUT NOW!
You can get the book at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, and University of Chicago Press and later at all major booksellers, university bookstores, libraries, and … Continue Reading My Book is OUT NOW!
Dream of the Water Children: The Black Pacific
水子の夢 . Black-Japanese memory . Amerasian . Militarism . Pacific. Social Justice . Gender . Race. Mixing . Arts. Thought.
Skip to navigationYou can get the book at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, and University of Chicago Press and later at all major booksellers, university bookstores, libraries, and … Continue Reading My Book is OUT NOW!
I began writing what has turned out to be my #book: #Dream of the #Water #Children: Memory and Morning in the #Black #Pacific, in 1983. … Continue Reading Writing, Green Tea, Anticipation
Hapa Japan is the premier source for studying, enjoying, reflecting on, and participating on the histories of Mixed-Race Japanese people around the world. I … Continue Reading New Article: “LABELS” on Re-Vamped HAPA JAPAN site
Dewayne Everettsmith is one of the most popular singer-songwriters in Australia today. He speaks and sings passionately to the continuing struggles of his people and brings light to the histories that he feels people must know, and to pay tribute to the ancestors and the lands that birthed him and … Continue Reading Dewayne Everettsmith, Aboriginal Singer
Black Arm Band is a group of some of the best-known music artists of Aboriginal Australia. Their piece: Dirtsong, giving homage to Australia’s land and spirit, has won worldwide acclaim. If one understands the destruction of the Aboriginal communities that are ongoing in Australia, from the colonial period and continuing … Continue Reading Aboriginal Music Group from Australia: Black Arm Band
Mark Makino‘s post on the embedded aspects of race, nation, colonialism, and Japanese identity in the term: Gaikoku-Jin (Outsider-Foreigner): Foreign? Western? White? Non-Japanese? Occidental proboscis monsters? https://futurealisreal.wordpress.com/2016/09/07/foreign-western-white-non-japanese-occidental-proboscis-monsters/
A Black-Japanese student enters a Japanese school. The Japanese students are amazed, curious, condescending, afraid, finding ways to make him outcast. This Short Film, written and directed by Emmanuel Osei-Kuffour, Jr., shines a lens onto a small town, and gives a picture of how Japanese-mix children and people, and black-mixed people and … Continue Reading Now Showing in Theaters: うまれつき (Born With It)