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            "id": "Topaz Mosaic (short story)",
            "model": "article",
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            "title": "Topaz Mosaic (short story)",
            "description": "Three vignettes by Toshio Mori centering on a family in\n  \n   Topaz\n  \n  and the furlough visit of their Nisei soldier son. In the first, an\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  father struggles to write a letter to his son Sam in English. In the second, Sam stops in Salt Lake City to buy presents for his family before visiting them in Topaz the next day, recalling the friend (presumably in Topaz) who was convinced he was a \"sucker\" for volunteering. In the last, Sam is greeted warmly by his family and learns that a sister has left camp for New York and a brother is also joining the army.",
            "url_title": "Topaz Mosaic (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Communication—verbal and nonverbal",
                "Family—blessing or curse",
                "Optimism—power or folly",
                "Reunion"
            ],
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                "Widely available"
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        {
            "id": "Uncle Yozo (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "1 26/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            "title": "Uncle Yozo (short story)",
            "description": "Comical story by Ted Tajima about an\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  man at an unspecified concentration camp who enlivens the first Christmas in camp by elaborately playing Santa. A regular contributor of stories to the\n  \n\n    Rafu Shimpo\n   \n\n  holiday edition, Tajima taught at Alhambra High for 35 years and led their acclaimed journalism program.",
            "url_title": "Uncle Yozo (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
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            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 7-8",
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Memoir"
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Disillusionment and dreams",
                "Importance of community",
                "Optimism – power or folly"
            ],
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                "No availability"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "Welcome Home! (short story)",
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            "title": "Welcome Home! (short story)",
            "description": "Short story that contrasts the reception of two returning soldiers to their homes after serving overseas. Two soldiers meet on a train and talk about what they look forward to upon returning home. The first, presumably white, gets off the train to a warm welcome by parents, a girlfriend and the family pet. The second, a Japanese American has no one waiting for him, since his family is still incarcerated in an Arizona concentration camp. He is ignored or greeted coldly by the locals in his hometown and when he gets to his family home, finds that it has been vandalized and painted with racist epithets. Authored by Sgt. Len Zinberg,\n  \n   Welcome Home!\n  \n  was first published in\n  \n   Yank\n  \n  , a weekly magazine published by the U.S. Army and reprinted in the\n  \n\n    Pacific Citizen\n   \n\n  in 1945.",
            "url_title": "Welcome Home! (short story)",
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                "Arts"
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            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Evils of racism",
                "Injustice",
                "Totalitarianism"
            ],
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                "Widely available"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "When the World Winds Down (short story)",
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            "title": "When the World Winds Down (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Sharon Hashimoto about a watch repairman who fixes a gold watch brought in by a young man who reminds him of his late brother. Fred Fujita is one of the last remaining\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  businessmen in the old Japanese section of Seattle. Agreeing to fix the gold watch at the end of one day, he decides to work on it at home, observing that his late wife would have objected to his doing so. While working on the watch, he recalls his brother Jimmy—the night at\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  when the seventeen-year-old Jimmy tells him he is going to enlist, trying to talk him out of it, and receiving word that he is missing in action.",
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
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            "rg_genre": [
                "Fiction"
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Isolation",
                "Lost love"
            ],
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                "Limited availability"
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            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "When Your Body Has Been Rolled in Thorns (short story)",
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            "title": "When Your Body Has Been Rolled in Thorns (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Ferris Takahashi about a Japanese American family leaving a concentration camp to return to their old home in Los Angeles. Told from the perspective of a college educated\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  husband and father of two young children, the story begins as they gather up their possessions and prepare to leave the camp. Yosh, a friend who had returned earlier and was able to reestablish his business, greets them at the train station. When they return to their home, they find it trashed and vandalized, with all the furniture gone. They also learn that the Buddhist temple in which they had stored other possessions had burned down. Yosh and his family offer to put them up until they can fix their house. Returning to look more closely at the house after dinner, the man and his\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  mother find racist graffiti. His mother assures him that they will rebound.",
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                "Arts"
            ],
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Fiction"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Evils of racism",
                "Facing reality",
                "Loss of innocence",
                "Will to survive"
            ],
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                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "You Who Are 25 (short story)",
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            "title": "You Who Are 25 (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Ted Tajima that recounts the arduous birth of a boy in a concentration camp and which contemplates that young man's fate in the very different world of twenty-five years later. Despite the title, the story is written in a third-person voice and does not directly address the young people it is about. Tajima, a high school teacher and frequent contributor to the\n  \n   Rafu Shimpo\n  \n  holiday edition, published the story in the 1967 issue.",
            "url_title": "You Who Are 25 (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Circle of life",
                "Power of the past",
                "Role of men"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "No availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "Yukiko and Carlos (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "6 31/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
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            },
            "title": "Yukiko and Carlos (short story)",
            "description": "Love story by Rubén \"Funkahuatl\" Guevara about a Chicano young man and a Nisei young woman that begins in 1941. Written in the first person voice of Carlos Gutiérrez, the story begins when he spots Yukiko Nakamura dancing at a\n  \n   bon dance\n  \n  while he is walking home from work. At Roosevelt High School, he approaches her, and they become friends, with each learning about the other's culture. Carlos aspires to be a boxing champion and is estranged from his alcoholic father. He soon becomes a regular at Yukiko's family's restaurant and begins taking lessons in the martial arts from Yukiko's father, eventually winning his respect and the right to date Yukiko. But the coming of war and the forced removal of Japanese Americans separate the couple, as Yukiko and her family are sent to\n  \n   Manzanar\n  \n  . Carlos eventually becomes a war hero by applying the lessons he learned from Mr. Nakamura, though he is badly injured.",
            "url_title": "Yukiko and Carlos (short story)",
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                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Everlasting love",
                "Family – blessing or curse",
                "Power of tradition",
                "Working class struggles",
                "Youth and beauty"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
        {
            "id": "An American Christmas (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "7 32/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            },
            "title": "An American Christmas (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Alice Nash centering on an elderly\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  woman in contemporary New York. As she struggles to carry a bag of rice home to her apartment, she reflects on her\n  \n   arrival in New York\n  \n  with her late husband after leaving the concentration camp and the kind Yamaguchi family who put them up while refusing to take money from them. They eventually opened a cleaning shop that helped pay for their only son's college education. A successful businessman in California, the son takes her on a trip every year, but largely keeps her away from her grandchildren due to his white wife's discomfort with her. When she gets back to her apartment, the family of the building's supervisor, the Gonzalez family, invites her to their home to help decorate their Christmas tree.",
            "url_title": "An American Christmas (short story)",
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                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Family – blessing or curse",
                "Immigrant experience",
                "Motherhood",
                "Working class struggles"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
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        {
            "id": "And There Are Stories, There Are Stories (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "8 33/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            "title": "And There Are Stories, There Are Stories (short story)",
            "description": "Prose poem memoir by Momoko Iko that traces her family's journey out of the concentration camps and her subsequent upbringing away from Japanese American communities on the West Coast. She begins with her birth in 1940 to\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  parents, her fleeting recollections of her family's incarceration, and life after the war, first in Philadelphia, then\n  \n   Chicago\n  \n  . Various stories centering on racism, racial identity, interracial relations, and the legacy of the camps in the 1950s and 1960s follow, tracing the narrator's journey to becoming a writer.",
            "url_title": "And There Are Stories, There Are Stories (short story)",
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                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Memoir"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Coming of age",
                "Coming of age",
                "Power of the past",
                "Self – inner and outer"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
        {
            "id": "Both Alike in Dignity (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "9 34/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            "title": "Both Alike in Dignity (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Chester Sakamoto about an elderly Holocaust survivor who mistakenly gets off the bus in\n  \n   Little Tokyo\n  \n  , where he meets an elderly Nisei man. One Sunday, on his weekly visit to a friend in Pasadena, Mr. Muncznik gets off the bus too early and ends up in Little Tokyo. Sitting to get his bearings, he finds himself next to a statue of a Japanese man. Friendly Mr. Sata stops and explains that it is a statue of Chiune Sugihara, a Japanese diplomat who risked his career and safety to help thousands of Jews escape Lithuania during the war. Conversation ensues about each man's wartime experience—Mr. Sata had lived in Little Tokyo before the war and had been sent with his family to\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  —revealing a startling coincidence.",
            "url_title": "Both Alike in Dignity (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Evils of racism",
                "Reunion",
                "War – glory, necessity, pain, tragedy",
                "Wisdom of experience"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
        {
            "id": "Children of Topaz (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "10 35/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
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                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Children%20of%20Topaz%20(short%20story)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "Children of Topaz (short story)",
            "description": "A snowfall at\n  \n   Topaz\n  \n  brings children out of the barracks to engage in snowball fights and snowman building. They recall friends back home and wish their non-Japanese American friends can join them in play. The very short story by\n  \n   Toshio Mori\n  \n  —dubbed \"A Sketch\"—appeared in the\n  \n\n    Pacific Citizen\n   \n\n  newspaper in 1945.",
            "url_title": "Children of Topaz (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 7-8",
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Companionship as salvation",
                "Isolation",
                "Nature as beauty"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
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            "id": "Snapshot, 1944 (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "11 36/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            },
            "title": "Snapshot, 1944 (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by\n  \n   David Mas Masumoto\n  \n  told in the first person voice of a\n  \n   Sansei\n  \n  young adult reflecting on the meaning of an old snapshot of his father's family taken at\n  \n   Gila River\n  \n  in 1944. The occasion is the funeral of his Uncle George, killed as an\n  \n   American soldier in the war\n  \n  . In the photo, the narrator's grandfather holds a flag and his grandmother holds a picture of George, while his father and aunts and uncles stand uneasily to the side. The narrator writes in turn about the postwar fates of his grandfather, who died before he was born; his grandmother, who lives with the family, but suffers from dementia; and his father, who struggled to buy a farm after the war and now grows raisins and other crops on eighty acres. Each in his her own way remains as silent to the narrator as in the photograph.",
            "url_title": "Snapshot, 1944 (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Historical Fiction"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Power of silence",
                "Power of the past",
                "Wisdom of experience"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
        {
            "id": "Some Lines for a Younger Brother... (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "12 37/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
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            },
            "title": "Some Lines for a Younger Brother... (short story)",
            "description": "First person recollection of the author's younger brother centering on the impact the World War II incarceration had on him. The youngest of eight children, Tets was doted on by his older siblings, but devastated when his father died when he was eight. A few years later, he had become a demoralized teenager in\n  \n   Manzanar\n  \n  who began skipping high school classes upon his return to Los Angeles after the war. Joining the army to see the world, he is almost at the end of his hitch when the Korean War breaks out. Sent into combat, he is killed in action. Years later, the author recalls attending the first\n  \n   Manzanar Pilgrimage\n  \n  and seeing the image of Tets as a child once again.",
            "url_title": "Some Lines for a Younger Brother... (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Memoir"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Death – inevitable or tragedy",
                "Disillusionment and dreams",
                "Growing up – pain or pleasure"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
        {
            "id": "Shirley Temple, Hotcha-cha (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "13 38/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/Shirley%20Temple,%20Hotcha-cha%20(short%20story)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Shirley%20Temple,%20Hotcha-cha%20(short%20story)/?format=api"
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            "title": "Shirley Temple, Hotcha-cha (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Wakako Yamauchi about a\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  strandee couple and their difficulties both in wartime Japan and in the\n  \n   resettlement\n  \n  era U.S. Told in the first-person voice of Mie, the story begins in 1939 when Mie is seventeen. As was the case for a sizable minority of Nisei youth, she had been sent to Japan for her education, having arrived there three years prior. She attends a boarding school and spends holidays with the Kodamas, a wealthy childless couple who are family friends. On a holiday, she meets Jobo Endo, a fellow Nisei, who is in Japan attending college. Courtship ensues. Recognizing the difficulties they would face in Japan as the war heats up, Jobo suggests that Mie ask the Kodamas for money to return to the U.S. However, the Kodamas had hoped to marry off Mie to a grand nephew. Though they consent to Jobo and Mie getting married, they are stuck in Japan as it enters war with the U.S. Facing hunger and other hardships, Jobo and Mie survive the war. Meanwhile, their families in the U.S. are sent to concentration camps; Mie's father dies in camp. Both families \"resettle\" in the Midwest, and Mie's family sends them money that allows them to return. But the time away had damaged relationships, and short stints with both families fail to work out. Eventually they move to California, where Jobo finds sudden success as an agent in the booming real estate market. But that success leads to the couple drifting apart, and Jobo eventually leaves Mie for another woman. The title of the story comes from a Shirley Temple doll that her family sent her in Japan that comes to represent her lost American life.",
            "url_title": "Shirley Temple, Hotcha-cha (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype": [
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Fiction"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Displacement",
                "Heartbreak of betrayal",
                "Isolation",
                "Wisdom of experience"
            ],
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            ],
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        },
        {
            "id": "Slant-Eyed Americans (short story)",
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            "links": {
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            "title": "Slant-Eyed Americans (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by\n  \n   Toshio Mori\n  \n  set in the days after the\n  \n   Pearl Harbor attack\n  \n  . A young\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  man's plans to take his mother to town that day are dashed by the outbreak of war. The next day, business at the flower market is slow, and the Japanese American merchants wonder about their future. Tom, a Nisei gardener friend, doesn't report to work out of despair over the war; the narrator and his family cheer him up. Later, the narrator's brother Kazuo, who is in the army, arrives home for a five-day furlough. At the end of his visit, the family sees him off, pondering the uncertainty of what is to come.",
            "url_title": "Slant-Eyed Americans (short story)",
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                "Arts"
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                "short stories"
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                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
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                "Fiction"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Facing darkness",
                "Losing hope"
            ],
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                "Available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
        },
        {
            "id": "The Shoyu Kid (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "15 40/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
            "links": {
                "html": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/The%20Shoyu%20Kid%20(short%20story)/?format=api",
                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/The%20Shoyu%20Kid%20(short%20story)/?format=api"
            },
            "title": "The Shoyu Kid (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Lonny Kaneko set in\n  \n   Minidoka\n  \n  centering on three boys who chase and bully a fourth boy, in the process unearthing his molestation by a camp guard. The Seattle-based author had been incarcerated at Minidoka as a child.\n  \n   The Shoyu Kid\n  \n  was originally published in\n  \n   Amerasia Journal\n  \n  in 1976.",
            "url_title": "The Shoyu Kid (short story)",
            "categories": [
                "Arts"
            ],
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                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Fiction"
            ],
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                "Coming of age",
                "Growing up – pain or pleasure",
                "Illusion of power",
                "Loss of innocence",
                "Vulnerability of the meek"
            ],
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                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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        },
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            "id": "The Sensei (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "16 41/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            },
            "title": "The Sensei (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by\n  \n   Wakako Yamauchi\n  \n  centering on a former Buddhist priest whose gambling addiction has turned him into a beggar in the early postwar years. Told in the first person by a\n  \n   Nisei\n  \n  woman named Utako, the story begins with the outbreak of war and the then seventeen-year-old Utako's incarceration with her family in an Arizona concentration camp. The\n  \n   loyalty questionnaire\n  \n  divides the family, as her brother Toshio becomes a \"\n  \n   no-no boy\n  \n  \" and gets sent alone to\n  \n   Tule Lake\n  \n  . There, he becomes friends with Jim Morita, a fellow \"no-no.\" After the war, the family returns to Los Angeles, and Utako ends up marrying Jim; she works as a painter of shower curtains, while he attends college. A couple of years later, Jim and Utako visit Las Vegas. On their way out, they run into the title character, a former Buddhist priest who had been a powerful inmate leader in post-segregation Tule Lake, who has now obviously fallen on hard times. The story follows the couple's two subsequent—and increasingly unsettling—interactions with him over the next few years, which take place as they struggle to establish themselves in the postwar economy.",
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                "Nationalism – complications",
                "Reunion"
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            "id": "The Summer of '43 (short story)",
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            "description": "Short story centering on Akira Koyama, a Nisei man who has left an unspecified concentration camp to attend college in Utah. There, he stubbornly tries to find a summer job in the face of rampant discrimination. After being turned down for a draftsman position because of his ancestry, he visits a laundry owned by an acquaintance's family in search of other leads. Meanwhile, Dale, a white navy veteran and one of his college roommates, suffers from stomach pains that resemble appendicitis. Akira accompanies him to the hospital and waits as Dale has successful surgery. After a conversation with the doctor, Akira is offered a job at the hospital.",
            "url_title": "The Summer of '43 (short story)",
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                "Arts"
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                "short stories"
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Evils of racism",
                "Individual versus society",
                "Working class struggles"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "Sundown in Topaz (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "18 43/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            "title": "Sundown in Topaz (short story)",
            "description": "Short story about an\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  man in\n  \n   Topaz\n  \n  during the time of the\n  \n   loyalty questionnaire\n  \n  . Shojiro Mikawa, a grandfather from Hiroshima, is incarcerated in Topaz with his family. His close friend, Tanimoto, is among those in the camp who is organizing resistance to the questionnaire. He attends a meeting led by Tanimoto that advocates refusing to answer the questionnaire. However an informant at the meeting has reported to the camp administration the names of all who attended. Called before the camp director, Mikawa is ordered to tell what he knows about the organization of the meeting or else be sent to\n  \n   Tule Lake\n  \n  and thus separated from his family.",
            "url_title": "Sundown in Topaz (short story)",
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                "Arts"
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                "short stories"
            ],
            "rg_interestlevel": [
                "Grades 9-12",
                "Adult"
            ],
            "rg_genre": [
                "Historical Fiction"
            ],
            "rg_theme": [
                "Losing hope",
                "Self-preservation"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
            "rg_rgmediatype_icon": "fa-file-text"
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            "id": "Sushi (short story)",
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            "index": "19 44/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/Sushi%20(short%20story)/?format=api"
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            "title": "Sushi (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Rei Noguchi about a young Japanese American girl who learns about the wartime incarceration from an\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  woman neighbor. It is a cold New Year's Eve in Dover, New Jersey, and Maya Okano has been dispatched by her parents to return a plate to a woman they call Grandmother Okamoto. The older woman, who is making sushi for New Year's, is happy to see the girl and serves her tea. Maya tells Grandmother Okamoto that she doesn't like sushi or Japanese food in general, preferring \"American\" food. Grandmother Okamoto sends Maya into the bedroom to fetch a can of nori from the dresser; when she does, she sees a little shrine on the dresser and the photograph of a young man in military uniform in front of barracks. When Maya asks, Grandmother Okamoto tells her about her son, who was killed fighting (presumably in the\n  \n   442nd Regimental Combat Team\n  \n  ) in Italy during World War II and about their forced removal from their Tulare, California, farm and subsequent incarceration in\n  \n   Poston\n  \n  . After she finishes making the sushi, they go and place some before the alter and pray together. Maya tells Grandmother Okamoto that she'd like to learn how to make sushi someday.",
            "url_title": "Sushi (short story)",
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                "Arts"
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                "Loss of innocence",
                "Power of the past",
                "Coming of age"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "The Black Dress (short story)",
            "model": "article",
            "index": "20 45/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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                "json": "https://resourceguide.densho.org/api/3.0/articles/The%20Black%20Dress%20(short%20story)/?format=api"
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            "title": "The Black Dress (short story)",
            "description": "Short story about a young woman who has recently left\n  \n   Heart Mountain\n  \n  to\n  \n   resettle in New York City\n  \n  in 1945. Invited to a party by co-workers at a silk screen shop, she decides to buy a new dress for the party. At the department store, she impulsively asks the friendly young female sales clerks to join her for dinner that night. Though she immediately regrets asking, the evening leads to an unexpected revelation.",
            "url_title": "The Black Dress (short story)",
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
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            "rg_theme": [
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                "Overcoming – fear, weakness, vice",
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            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Limited availability"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "Case History (short story)",
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            "description": "Short story about a young Nisei couple settling in \"Centreville,\" a fictional small town in California, after World War II. John and Mary Mori arrive and open a flower market in town. But despite John's military service and the couple's good deeds, the face anti-Japanese harassment before a series of events begin to turn the tide. Author Bradford Smith tells the story using fictitious newspaper articles, letters, and personal testimony.",
            "url_title": "Case History (short story)",
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            "rg_rgmediatype": [
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            "rg_theme": [
                "Overcoming – fear, weakness, vice",
                "Patriotism – positive side or complications",
                "Evils of racism"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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            "id": "The Broken Lines of Age (short story)",
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            "index": "22 47/{'value': 81, 'relation': 'eq'}",
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            "title": "The Broken Lines of Age (short story)",
            "description": "Short story by Jimmy Tokeshi about an\n  \n   Issei\n  \n  grandfather who takes his nineteen-year-old granddaughter on an impromptu pilgrimage to\n  \n   Manzanar\n  \n  on Christmas Eve decades after his wartime incarceration there.",
            "url_title": "The Broken Lines of Age (short story)",
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            "rg_rgmediatype": [
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            "rg_interestlevel": [
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                "Power of the past"
            ],
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            ],
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            "id": "The Brothers Murata (short story)",
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            "title": "The Brothers Murata (short story)",
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            "url_title": "The Brothers Murata (short story)",
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            ],
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                "Role of men"
            ],
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                "Optimism—power of folly",
                "Wisdom of experience"
            ],
            "rg_availability": [
                "Widely available"
            ],
            "rg_rgmediatype_label": "Short Stories",
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