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Coalescence in confinement| Cultural synthesis and identity in Michi Tanaka's "Community Life"

<p> <i>Community Life</i> by Michi Tanaka was one of eight government commissioned murals created by students at Rohwer Relocation Center in 1944 illustrating the Japanese American evacuation and relocation. The final versions of these works no longer exist. The preparatory drafts, however, remain intact and provide valuable information regarding the artists' experiences at Rohwer. Through an iconographic analysis of Tanaka's mural draft and an exploration of themes and principal elements in her life at camp such as religion, fashion and socialization, this thesis suggests that <i>Community Life</i> illustrates a cultural synthesis between two disparate cultures. This synthesis influenced the development of a bicultural identity, specifically among <i> Nisei</i> (or the American-born children of Japanese immigrants) such as Tanaka. The mural can be viewed as an introspective consideration of Tanaka's incarceration in which the cultural conflict of her Japanese heritage and American citizenry seems to have been resolved artistically.</p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:1548147
Date28 December 2013
CreatorsSanders, Kimberly L.
PublisherUniversity of Arkansas at Little Rock
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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