Women of Okinawa: Nine Voices from a Garrison Island

by Ruth Ann Keyso

2000

Status

Available

Call number

305.4

Publication

Cornell University Press

DDC/MDS

305.4

Description

Since World War II, Okinawa has been the stage where the United States and Japan act out dramatic changes in their relationship. Women from three generations, each with a different account of the ways that international affairs have transformed Okinawa, here tell the story of that tiny island and its interactions with an enormous U.S. military presence. Three of the women were born before the Pacific War, and their first memories of Americans are of troops coming ashore with bayonets fixed. A second group, now middle-aged, grew up in the 1950s and 1960s, when massive American bases were a fixture of the landscape. The youngest women, for whom the bases are a historical accident, are in their twenties and thirties, raised in a country increasingly confident of its status as a world power. In conversations with Ruth Ann Keyso, these nine Okinawan women reflect on life on a garrison island: on relations with mainland Japan; on their dreams and ambitions; on Japanese treatment of ethnic minorities; on the changing role of women in Japanese and in Okinawan society; and on the drawbacks and pleasures of living side-by-side with U.S. military personnel and their families. Ruth Ann Keyso's compelling account sheds light on contemporary Okinawa, United States?Japan relations, and the small truths revealed by life stories clearly told and well reported.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member marilynsantiago
I thought this was a very good book. I liked the way Ruth Ann Keyso interviewed women who grew up durin WWII time, the occupation, and after. It gives a broad look at how Okinawa has suffered and the strength and spirit of the people.

ISBN

9780801486654
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