Dana Y. Nakano is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology, Gerontology, and Gender Studies at California State University, Stanislaus, and co-editor of Japanese American Millennials: Rethinking Generation, Community, and Diversity.
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Description
What are the limits to how assimilated and welcomed groups can become? How far do race and racism stretch to shape the lives of people who have been here for generations and identify as full Americans? Nakano deftly gets at these key questions through this easy-to-read, well-researched book on Japanese Americans in Southern California. It offers a necessary lens into how culture, race, and nationalism intersect in present-day America. * Pawan Dhingra, author of Hyper Education: Why Good Schools, Good Grades, and Good Behavior Are Not Enough * A major contribution to Japanese American studies, especially on post-incarceration generations of US-born Sansei and Yonsei. Japanese Americans and the Racial Uniform sheds light on the fallacy of a perspective that assumes the end of "assimilation" for children and grandchildren of second-generation Asian Americans, and hence the neglect of their minoritized experiences. Deeply personal and yet theoretically sound, Nakano's research unveils why and how race still matters to these ostensibly fully assimilated Americans. As later-generation citizens of Asian ancestries are sure to increase in number, this book stands as a trailblazer in the scholarship on race and being American in contemporary Asian America. * Eiichiro Azuma, author of In Search of Our Frontier: Japanese America and Settler Colonialism in the Construction of Japan's Borderless Empire * The book tells a fascinating and theoretically compelling story of the daily lived experience of third-plus generation Japanese Americans through an in-depth study of an ethnic theme park. It offers invaluable insight into the long-lasting insidious impact of race on a highly assimilated ethnic group and reminds readers of the continuing significance of race and the limits of assimilation in US society. * Min Zhou, co-editor of Contemporary Asian America *

