The Closed Hand

PURDUE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781557536075

Images of the Japanese in Modern Peruvian Literature

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By Rebecca Riger Tsurami
Imprint:
PURDUE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
290

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Description

Rebecca Riger Tsurumi has worked as a journalist/editor in Latin America and the United States. A Latin americanist who focuses on relations between Asia and Latin America, she received a PhD in Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian Literatures and Languages from the CUNY Graduate Center and has taught Spanish language and literature courses at various colleges within the City University of New York, SUNY Purchase College, and Adelphi University. She resides with her family in New York.

"The Closed Hand is a very important study that helps us understand not only the portrayal of the Japanese in Peruvian literature, but the life, challenges, and struggles of aFar Eastern group in the Southern Hemisphere."--Araceli Tinajero, author of Orientalismo en el modernismo hispanoamericano TRANSMODERNITY: Journal of Peripheral Cultural Production of the Luso-Hispanic World, 2(1) Riger Tsurumi, Rebecca. The Closed Hand: Images of the Japanese in Modern Peruvian Literature. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue UP, 2012. Print. Pages 313. DEBBIE LEE-DISTEFANO SOUTHEAST MISSOURI STATE UNIVERSITY The Closed Hand: Images of the Japanese in Modern Peruvian Literature is a commendable work that strives to present the images of the Japanese by juxtaposing two bodies of literature: texts written by Peruvians of Japanese descent with texts by Peruvian authors of other ethnic backgrounds. Riger Tusrumi's project is quite aggressive but in the end manages to achieve a comprehensive study, weaving the reader down a path that begins with history, continues on to discuss the images of the Japanese in Peruvian literature, and finishes with analyses of Nisei poetry. In the end the book, like many comparative projects, brings forward more questions than it strives to answer. The collection starts with the history of Japanese immigration and subsequent presence in Peru, focusing primarily on the early history. The chapter discusses the economic climates in both Peru and Japan that prompted migration, passes through the discriminatory World War II period, and lightly touches on the post-WWII period that followed. This section is very useful for the uninitiated scholar. Her timeline is succinct and gives the most pertinent information. This chapter is focused on presenting the reader with possible reasons as to why the contract labor system was needed, why bring laborers from Japan and the ramifications of them both. She also briefly discusses Fujimori and his fall from grace to be convicted of human rights abuses. Her discussions of the Peruvian political climate and the inclusion or exclusion of the Japanese-Peruvians are rather simplistic and could use more substance. Her discussion of the APRA, for example, and Victor Raul Haya de la Torre's negativity

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