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            "title": "Gasa Gasa Girl Goes to Camp (book)",
            "description": "Concentration camp memoir by a\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  artist. Ten years old at the time of the wartime incarceration, Lily Yuriko Nakai Havey was sent to\n  \n   Santa Anita Assembly Center\n  \n  and\n  \n   Amache\n  \n  with her older brother and\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  parents. Evolving from captions that accompanied displays of the author's postwar paintings,\n  \n   Gasa Gasa Girl\n  \n  intersperses stories of life in the camps with recollections of happier days with her parents, brother, and aunts in Hollywood, California, before the war. The book is illustrated by twenty-eight color reproductions of her watercolor paintings that depict both her external and internal lives during the war, as well as a like number of family photographs, archival photographs, and photographs of key objects mentioned in the text. Published by the University of Utah Press, the book includes an foreword by historian Cherstin Lyon.",
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            "title": "Gasa-Gasa Girl (book)",
            "description": "The second mystery novel in Naomi Hirahara's \"Mas Arai Mysteries\" series,\n  \n   Gasa-Gasa Girl\n  \n  finds the\n  \n   Kibei\n  \n  crime solver in New York where he reconciles with his estranged daughter and unravels the mysterious death of a wealthy\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  businessman.",
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                "Family – blessing or curse",
                "Greed as downfall",
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            "id": "Fumiko Hayashida: The Woman Behind the Symbol (film)",
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            "description": "A 2009 short documentary film about Fumiko Hayashida, a pregnant mother of two who was one of 227 members of the\n  \n   Bainbridge Island\n  \n  Japanese American community who were forced from their homes in March 1942. Hayashida—or at least her image—became immortalized in a photograph taken of her holding her young daughter. First appearing the\n  \n   Seattle Post-Intelligencer\n  \n  , the photograph became one of the iconic images of the roundup. Providing both a biographical portrait of Hayashida and telling the larger story of Bainbridge Island, the film also shows the then 97-year-old Hayashida revisiting the site of the former\n  \n   Minidoka\n  \n  concentration camp in Idaho.",
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            "title": "Gaijin: American Prisoner of War (book)",
            "description": "Gaijin: American Prisoner of War\n  \n  by Matt Faulkner is the story of a hapa teenage boy's struggle living in post December 7 San Francisco, California. 13-year-old Koji Miyamoto discovers that life being biracial (his mother Adeline is white and his father Ichiro is Japanese) is just as difficult inside an incarceration camp as it was outside in the city after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Written for 5th through 8th grade readers, this graphic novel has a distinctive style of elongated caricatures colored with dark reds, yellows, blues, and browns.",
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            "title": "Gambling Den (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Akemi Kikumura about a Japanese American family in Lodi, California, on the eve of World War II. Told in the first person voice of fifteen-year-old Peggy Tanaka, the story begins with the Tanaka family's fateful purchase of a restaurant in 1941. The restaurant soon becomes a success as migrant workers are drawn to both Mrs. Tanaka's cooking and the beauty of Ann, Peggy's eighteen-year-old sister. Mr. Tanaka's decision to open a gambling den in back further adds to profits, despite Mrs. Tanaka's disapproval and the necessary kick-backs to a corrupt local policeman. But the Tanakas' lives are soon to be complicated by Ann's romance with a young man of burakumin (Japanese outcaste) origin, a conniving neighbor, and the impending roundup of Japanese Americans after the attack on Pearl Harbor.",
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            "id": "Ganbare Don't Give Up! (film)",
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            "title": "Ganbare Don't Give Up! (film)",
            "description": "Documentary film that provides an overview of what happened to Japanese Americans in Hawai'i during World War II, focusing on the limited internment of\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  community leaders and the exploits of Japanese American men in the armed forces.\n  \n   Ganbare Don't Give Up!\n  \n  was produced as a part of the Japanese Cultural Center of Hawai'i's core exhibition,\n  \n   Okage Sama De: I am what I am because of you\n  \n  , which remains the only place where it can be viewed.",
            "url_title": "Ganbare Don't Give Up! (film)",
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                "Arts"
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            "id": "Good Luck Soup (film)",
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            "index": "6 56/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            "title": "Good Luck Soup (film)",
            "description": "Autobiographical documentary film by Matthew Hashiguchi that explores his and his family's experience growing up as mixed-race Japanese Americans in Cleveland, Ohio. Hashiguchi draws inspiration from his Nisei grandmother and family matriarch Eva Hashiguchi, who\n  \n   settled\n  \n  in Cleveland after leaving the\n  \n   Jerome\n  \n  , Arkansas, concentration camp during World War II and chose to remain there. In addition to the feature length film, the\n  \n   Good Luck Soup\n  \n  project also includes an interactive website that serves as an \"participatory storytelling\" platform.",
            "url_title": "Good Luck Soup (film)",
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                "Adult"
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                "Coming of age",
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                "Power of tradition"
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            "id": "Great Grandfather's Drum (film)",
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            "title": "Great Grandfather's Drum (film)",
            "description": "Documentary film that tells the story of Japanese Americans in Maui through the story of Maui Taiko and its founder, Kay Fukumoto.",
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                "Arts"
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                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
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            "rg_genre": [
                "Documentary"
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Expression through art",
                "Importance of community",
                "Power of the past",
                "Power of tradition"
            ],
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                "Available"
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            "id": "From Bullets to Ballots (film)",
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            "title": "From Bullets to Ballots (film)",
            "description": "Documentary film on Japanese Americans from Hawai'i as part of the\n  \n   442nd Regimental Combat Team\n  \n  and their role in the political realignment of Hawai'i after the war.\n  \n   From Bullets to Ballots\n  \n  was one of three short films directed by Robert A. Nakamura and produced by Karen L. Ishizuka in conjunction with\n  \n   From Bento to Mixed Plate: Americans of Japanese Ancestry in Multicultural Hawai'i,\n  \n  an exhibition produced by the\n  \n   Japanese American National Museum\n  \n  in 1997.",
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                "Arts"
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                "films"
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                "Adult"
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                "Quest for power",
                "Role of men",
                "War – glory, necessity, pain, tragedy",
                "Working class struggles"
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            "id": "From Hawaii to the Holocaust: A Shared Moment in History (film)",
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            "title": "From Hawaii to the Holocaust: A Shared Moment in History (film)",
            "description": "Documentary film on the men of the\n  \n   522nd Field Artillery Battalion\n  \n  and their encounter with Jewish victims of the Nazi death camps at the end of World War II. The 1993 film was a production of the Hawaii Holocaust Project.",
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            "rg_genre": [
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Evils of racism",
                "Facing darkness",
                "War – glory, necessity, pain, tragedy"
            ],
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            "id": "The 442nd: Duty, Honor and Loyalty (film)",
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            "title": "The 442nd: Duty, Honor and Loyalty (film)",
            "description": "Documentary film on the\n  \n   442nd Regimental Combat Team\n  \n  .\n  \n   The 442nd: Duty, Honor & Loyalty\n  \n  is a English language version of a 1996 Japanese language documentary produced by Bungei Shunju, Ltd. titled\n  \n   Amerika Dai-442 Hohei Rentai: Nikkei Niseitachi no Dainijin Seikai Taisen\n  \n  . The English language script was by John Dobovan, who also narrated.",
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            "id": "442: Live with Honor, Die with Dignity (film)",
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            "title": "442: Live with Honor, Die with Dignity (film)",
            "description": "A 2010 documentary film directed by Japanese filmmaker Junichiro Suzuki that tells the story of the\n  \n   442nd Regimental Combat Team\n  \n  and other Japanese Americans in the U.S. armed forces during World War II. It is the second film in Suzuki's trilogy of films on the Japanese American World War II experience.",
            "url_title": "442: Live with Honor, Die with Dignity (film)",
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            "rg_theme": [
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                "War - glory, necessity, pain, tragedy",
                "Evils of racism"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Films and Video",
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            "id": "Heart Mountain (book)",
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            "index": "12 62/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            },
            "title": "Heart Mountain (book)",
            "description": "Novel by acclaimed essayist and nature/travel writer Gretel Ehrlich. Set inside and outside of the\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  , Wyoming, concentration camp,\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  was published by Viking in 1988.",
            "url_title": "Heart Mountain (book)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "books"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
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            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Historical Fiction"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Disillusionment and dreams",
                "Displacement",
                "Love and sacrifice",
                "War – glory, necessity, pain, tragedy"
            ],
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        {
            "id": "Home in the West (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "13 63/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            },
            "title": "Home in the West (short story)",
            "description": "Short story recounting the return to California by Hirosho Yugi and his wife after their incarceration at\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  . His initial happiness is dulled when a group of neighbors try to force him out, first by burning down a shed and throwing rocks through windows, then by the burning down of their house. The day after their house is torched, they receive a telegram informing them of the death of their son in combat in Italy.",
            "url_title": "Home in the West (short story)",
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                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Evils of racism",
                "Individual versus society",
                "Injustice",
                "Loss of innocence",
                "Totalitarianism"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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        {
            "id": "Home Is the Expatriate (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "14 64/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            "title": "Home Is the Expatriate (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by\n  \n   Larry Tajiri\n  \n  about a\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  strandee just returned from Japan after a decade there. Joe Suzuki was a Nisei in Los Angeles who graduated high school in the mid 1930s. Unwilling to take the types of jobs available to Nisei at that time—primarily agricultural and/or manual labor type jobs—he first tried Hollywood, then went to Japan, as did many other Nisei at that time. He landed a white-collar job at a Japanese firm, but it proved to be a dead end job, and, as a Nisei, he drew suspicion from the police. He attempted to return to the U.S. in November 1941, but his ship turned around midway as war broke out, and he was stuck in Japan during the war. He returns embittered, his mother having died in an American concentration camp, and his father having\n  \n   resettled in Chicago\n  \n  .",
            "url_title": "Home Is the Expatriate (short story)",
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                "Arts"
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                "Adult"
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                "Pride and downfall"
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            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
        {
            "id": "Homecoming (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "15 65/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Homecoming%20(short%20story)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Homecoming%20(short%20story)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Homecoming (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by\n  \n   Toshio Mori\n  \n  about an\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  woman's first visit with her son Mamoru after he has been severely wounded in combat as a member of the\n  \n   442nd Regimental Combat Team\n  \n  . \"Homecoming\" takes the form of a story told in the woman's first person voice to her grandchildren. It is one of several stories by Mori featuring the same woman published in the\n  \n\n    Pacific Citizen\n   \n\n  between 1949 and 1952 that later became the basis of his novel\n  \n   Woman from Hiroshima\n  \n  , published in 1978. The first half of the story is about her efforts to see her son after being allowed to leave\n  \n   Topaz\n  \n  to\n  \n   return to the West Coast\n  \n  . She is at first dismayed to learn that he has been moved to a military hospital in Auburn, California, known to be a hotbed of anti-Japanese racism. Arriving in Auburn, they see numerous anti-Japanese signs and are unable to find a place to stay until the Red Cross sends them to a Japanese American owned farm in the next town. The second half of the story is about her visit with Mamoru, whom she learns for the first time is confined to a wheelchair and may not ever be able to walk again.",
            "url_title": "Homecoming (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
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                "short stories"
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                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Fiction"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Love and sacrifice",
                "Motherhood",
                "Wisdom of experience"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
        {
            "id": "Here, in America? (film)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "16 66/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Here,%20in%20America%3F%20(film)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Here,%20in%20America%3F%20(film)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Here, in America? (film)",
            "description": "Short documentary film that presents highlights from the Assembly on Wartime Relocation & Internment of Civilians, held in San Francisco in April 2005. The event included the public testimony of persons of Japanese, German, and Italian ancestry about the World War II era internment/incarceration and persons of Arab, Muslim or South Asian descent about post-9/11 detentions. In addition to excepts of the testimonies, the film includes historical background on the World War II detentions along with historical photographs and footage. Testimonies highlighted include Buddy Fujii (statement read by Bill Sato); Victor Kimura; Libia Yamamoto; Art Shibayama; Angelica Higashide (statement read by Naomi Quinones); Doris Berg Nye (statement read by Carole Eiserloh); Ted Eckardt (statement read by Bruce Donald); Constanza Ilacqua Foran; Al Bronzini; John Christgau; Lawrence DiStasi; Yaman Hamdan; and Xavier Becerra.",
            "url_title": "Here, in America? (film)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "films"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Documentary"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Power of the past",
                "Injustice"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Films and Video",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-film"
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        {
            "id": "Hidden Internment: The Art Shibayama Story (film)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "17 67/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Hidden%20Internment:%20The%20Art%20Shibayama%20Story%20(film)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Hidden%20Internment:%20The%20Art%20Shibayama%20Story%20(film)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Hidden Internment: The Art Shibayama Story (film)",
            "description": "A 2004 documentary film about the life of Art Shibayama, a\n  \n   Japanese Peruvian\n  \n  who was forcibly taken from his home in Peru in 1944 when he was thirteen years old, and interned in a Department of Justice camp in\n  \n   Crystal City\n  \n  , Texas, for the duration of World War II. This film explores the lesser-known history of the Japanese Latin American detention, where over 2,000 Latin Americans were essentially kidnapped from their countries and interned in American government camps, to be used as political pawns between countries. Using first-person narrative and archival footage, the film shows how despite their traumatic experiences and wrongful treatment, Shibayama and other Latin Americans have been denied redress that was awarded to Japanese Americans in 1988 for their loss of civil liberties and forced wartime incarceration. Directed by Casey Peek and produced by Irum Shiekh.",
            "url_title": "Hidden Internment: The Art Shibayama Story (film)",
            "categories": [
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            ],
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
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                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Documentary"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Injustice"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Films and Video",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-film"
        },
        {
            "id": "Heart Mountain: An All American Town (film)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "18 68/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Heart%20Mountain:%20An%20All%20American%20Town%20(film)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Heart%20Mountain:%20An%20All%20American%20Town%20(film)/?format=api"
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            "title": "Heart Mountain: An All American Town (film)",
            "description": "Documentary film on the\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  , Wyoming, concentration camp written, produced and directed by Raechel Donahue that focuses on the experiences of the children in the camp.",
            "url_title": "Heart Mountain: An All American Town (film)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "films"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Documentary"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Growing up – pain or pleasure",
                "Injustice",
                "Overcoming – fear, weakness, vice",
                "Power of the past"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Films and Video",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-film"
        },
        {
            "id": "Heart Mountain: Three Years in an Internment Camp (film)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "19 69/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Heart%20Mountain:%20Three%20Years%20in%20an%20Internment%20Camp%20(film)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Heart%20Mountain:%20Three%20Years%20in%20an%20Internment%20Camp%20(film)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Heart Mountain: Three Years in an Internment Camp (film)",
            "description": "A short documentary film from 1997 that documents the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans at the American concentration camp in\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  , Wyoming. The film also documents daily life for the Japanese American incarcerees, who endured living in rough barracks, surrounded by barbed wire in sub-zero temperatures and dust storms, as well as the political and personal conflicts that arose with the government-issued \"\n  \n   loyalty questionnaire\n  \n  \" and\n  \n   draft resistance\n  \n  . In addition to interviews with former inmates and local residents, the film uses previously unseen footage from the camp. The film was produced by KCSM, a San Mateo, California, public television station as part of\n  \n   The New Americans\n  \n  series and was directed by Dianne Fukami, with David Hosley serving as executive producer. It was originally titled\n  \n   Heart Mountain: Three Years in a Relocation Center\n  \n  . Funders for the documentary included the Chevron Corporation, the Henri and Tomoye Takahashi Charitable Foundation, and the Ray and Peggy Daba Fund.",
            "url_title": "Heart Mountain: Three Years in an Internment Camp (film)",
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Injustice",
                "Will to survive"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Films and Video",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-film"
        },
        {
            "id": "The Heart No Longer Silent (play)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "20 70/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/The%20Heart%20No%20Longer%20Silent%20(play)/?format=api",
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            },
            "title": "The Heart No Longer Silent (play)",
            "description": "Storytelling performance with digital imagery by storyteller Megumi and artist Elaine Sayoko Yoneoka. Funded by the\n  \n   California Civil Liberties Public Education Program\n  \n  ,\n  \n   The Heart No Longer Silent: Stories with Images from the Japanese American Internment of World War II\n  \n  was performed several times in Central and Northern California in 2002.",
            "url_title": "The Heart No Longer Silent (play)",
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                "Arts"
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                "plays"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 7-8",
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Quest for discovery",
                "Power of the past",
                "Evils of racism",
                "Will to survive"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "No availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Plays",
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        {
            "id": "Heiji (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "21 71/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Heiji%20(short%20story)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Heiji (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Jeff Tsuyoshi Matsuda about a disheveled elderly\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  widower who goes to a empty field in his Westchester, California, neighborhood every day for reasons that no one can figure out. In slowly revealing the reason for his quest, Heiji Taguma's wartime family history is revealed. His family had farmed twenty acres in the area before the war, but lost their crops and their farm in the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. Heiji's father Masu was among the\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  arrested by the FBI and was taken to the\n  \n   Bismarck\n  \n  , North Dakota internment camp, eventually rejoining his family at\n  \n   Manzanar\n  \n  . But he returned a broken man: while Heiji\n  \n   resettled in Chicago\n  \n  , he refused to leave Manzanar and died there just after the end of the war. Heiji's odd ritual seemed to have been triggered by the death of his wife Keiko, who had once cooked all his meals and washed and selected his clothes.",
            "url_title": "Heiji (short story)",
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                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
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            ],
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            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Female roles",
                "Injustice",
                "Power of the past"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "No availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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        },
        {
            "id": "Half Kenneth (film)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "22 72/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Half%20Kenneth%20(film)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Half%20Kenneth%20(film)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Half Kenneth (film)",
            "description": "Short dramatic film about two mixed race brothers at\n  \n   Manzanar\n  \n  in 1945. A 21-minute short,\n  \n   Half Kenneth\n  \n  was made by Ken Ochiai as a master's thesis film at the American Film Institute.",
            "url_title": "Half Kenneth (film)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "films"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 6-8",
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
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                "Short"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Coming of age",
                "Loss of innocence",
                "Family - blessing or curse"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Films and Video",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-film"
        },
        {
            "id": "Harsh Canvas: The Art and Life of Henry Sugimoto (film)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "23 73/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Harsh%20Canvas:%20The%20Art%20and%20Life%20of%20Henry%20Sugimoto%20(film)/?format=api",
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            },
            "title": "Harsh Canvas: The Art and Life of Henry Sugimoto (film)",
            "description": "A 2001 biographical documentary film on the life and work of\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  artist\n  \n   Henry Sugimoto\n  \n  , based on the artist's memoirs and testimony before the\n  \n   Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians\n  \n  . The film highlights Sugimoto's art through archival and contemporary footage and follows his life's journey from immigration to his incarceration with his family during World War II in Arkansas, and postwar relocation to New York. Actor\n  \n   Mako\n  \n  narrates the film in the voice of Sugimoto. Interviews with his daughter Madeleine Sugimoto and sister-in-law Naomi Tagawa provide additional information on his life, while fellow artist George Mukai and curators Kristine Kim and Stephanie Barron discuss the significance of his work.",
            "url_title": "Harsh Canvas: The Art and Life of Henry Sugimoto (film)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "films"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 6-8",
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
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            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Expression through art",
                "Immigrant experience",
                "Injustice"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "No availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Films and Video",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-film"
        },
        {
            "id": "Hito Hata: Raise the Banner (film)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "24 74/{'value': 539, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Hito%20Hata:%20Raise%20the%20Banner%20(film)/?format=api",
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            },
            "title": "Hito Hata: Raise the Banner (film)",
            "description": "Landmark feature film produced by Visual Communications (VC), a Los Angeles based non-profit in 1980. Centering on the life story of an\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  man,\n  \n   Hito Hata\n  \n  was likely the first dramatic feature film about Asian Americans by Asian Americans since the silent film era.",
            "url_title": "Hito Hata: Raise the Banner (film)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
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                "Grades 9-12",
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            ],
            "rg_genre": [
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            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Immigrant experience"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Films and Video",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-film"
        }
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