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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Oz In The Valley Of Ashes: Visions Of Tomorrow At The New York World's Fairs Of 1939 And 1964, Emily Mieras
Oz In The Valley Of Ashes: Visions Of Tomorrow At The New York World's Fairs Of 1939 And 1964, Emily Mieras
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Perceptions Of Poverty: Material Life Among The Tenements Of New York City During The Nineteenth Century, Megan Mary Haley
Perceptions Of Poverty: Material Life Among The Tenements Of New York City During The Nineteenth Century, Megan Mary Haley
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Who Went To Market?: An Urban And Rural, Late Eighteenth-Century Perspective Based On Faunal Assemblages From Curles Neck Plantation And The Everard Site, Susan Michelle Trevarthen
Who Went To Market?: An Urban And Rural, Late Eighteenth-Century Perspective Based On Faunal Assemblages From Curles Neck Plantation And The Everard Site, Susan Michelle Trevarthen
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
"Work Enough For Head And Heart": Dramatic Interaction And The Social Dynamics Of The Steward-Planter Relationship In Antebellum Tidewater Virginia, Neil Macrae Kennedy
"Work Enough For Head And Heart": Dramatic Interaction And The Social Dynamics Of The Steward-Planter Relationship In Antebellum Tidewater Virginia, Neil Macrae Kennedy
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
A Participatory Study Of The Self-Identity Of Kibei Nisei Men: A Sub Group Of Second Generation Japanese American Men, William T. Masuda
A Participatory Study Of The Self-Identity Of Kibei Nisei Men: A Sub Group Of Second Generation Japanese American Men, William T. Masuda
Doctoral Dissertations
At one time, the Kibei were perceived as "a minority within a minority" (Me Williams, 1944: 322) who were "distrusted in both America and Japan" (1944:321). But today, the Kibei are hardly distinguishable from the Nisei as they both enter the evening of their lives. Raised in both America and Japan, but strongly influenced in their formative years by Japanese cultural values and beliefs, they were often perceived differently by their own family, by the Japanese American community, and by the American community at large. The apparent marginality of this group, living on the fringes of or in the space …