I Become a Nisei - Fourth Printing
Description
I Become a Nisei collects a 1942 essay by Isamu Noguchi written from a prison camp for Japanese Americans during World War II. The book includes sixteen color plates of artworks and related correspondence from The Noguchi Museum Archives.
Though exempt as a New York resident from the forced relocation program authorized by Executive Order 9066, Isamu Noguchi voluntarily entered the Poston War Relocation Center, Arizona, in May 1942 with ambitious plans to design gardens, recreation areas, and arts programs. He arrived into the entirely different reality of what we now know to be concentration camps, with scant resources, intense heat and dust storms, and no support for his plans. To the management he was a prisoner, and to most of the other prisoners he was suspicious due to his background.
From this place of alienation, he responded to a request from DeWitt Wallace of Reader’s Digest for an article on the situation with a complex and moving piece which went unpublished at the time. The text intertwines observations on the daily realities of the camps with personal reflections on cultural identity, community, and formative articulations of visions and conflicts that would resonate in his later work. At the heart of the essay, Noguchi questions what the democracy of the American government stands for, and if it will come out on the other side of the War to meet Japanese Americans as its rhetoric preaches.
The book includes a foreword by Brian Niiya, Content Director at Densho, an organization which preserves stories of the WWII incarceration of Japanese Americans in order to promote equity and justice today. Hand set in Neuzeit-Buch. Printed letterpress from metal type on a Heidelberg Cylinder press by Jon Beacham of The Brother In Elysium and Daniel Keleher. Sewn and bound by hand, and laid into a letterpress printed dust jacket.
The fourth revised edition includes 16 color plates: artworks, drawings, archival photographs from Poston, Arizona, and two letters by Noguchi: one to the photographer Man Ray, and one to his sister Ailes Gilmour.
Return/Exchange
We have a 30-day return policy, which means you have 30 days after receiving your item to request a return. However, due to health and safety regulations, all food item purchases are final and non-returnable.
To be eligible for a return, your item must be in the same condition that you received it, unworn or unused, with tags, and in its original packaging. You’ll also need the receipt or proof of purchase.
To start a return, you can contact us at mise@jaccc.org.