pular para conteúdo
The house on Lemon Street : Japanese pioneers and the American dream
FecharVer prévia deste item

The house on Lemon Street : Japanese pioneers and the American dream

Autor: Mark Howland Rawitsch
Editora: Boulder : University Press of Colorado, ©2012.
Séries: George and Sakaye Aratani Nikkei in the Americas series.
Edição/Formato   Livro : Biografia : InglêsVer todas as edições e formatos
Resumo:
Discusses the little known early-twentieth century court battle of Jukichi and Ken Harada, Japanese immigrants, to keep their home in Riverside, California, which they purchased in 1915 in the names of their three young American-born children because the California Alien Land Law prohibited immigrants from owning real estate.
Classificação:

(ainda não classificado) 0 com críticas - Seja o primeiro.

 

Encontrar uma cópia na biblioteca

Recuperando... Encontrando bibliotecas que possuem este item...

Detalhes

Gênero/Forma: Trials, litigation, etc
Biography
Case studies
Pessoa Denominada: Jukichi Harada; Ken Harada; Jukichi Harada; Jukichi Harada
Tipo de Material: Biografia
Tipo de Documento: Livro
Todos os Autores / Contribuintes: Mark Howland Rawitsch
ISBN: 9781607321651 1607321653 9781607321668 1607321661
Número OCLC: 769429702
Descrição: xiii, 388 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.
Conteúdos: Here Is Your Chance --
The Schoolteacher and the Samurai's Daughter --
Here to Stay --
In the Shadow of the Mission Inn --
Pilgrim's Progress --
Little Lamb Gone To Jesus --
The People of California Versus Harada --
World War and a Basket of Apples --
Face to Face --
Keep California White --
The Only Time I See the Sun --
Farewell to Riverside --
Leaving Lemon Street Behind --
Camp --
Blue Bandanas and an Ironwood Club --
From Issei to Nisei --
Questions of Loyalty --
It's Up To You, Medic --
Home --
Epilogue: Sumi's House --
Afterword --
Glossary of Japanese Terms.
Título da Série: George and Sakaye Aratani Nikkei in the Americas series.
Responsabilidade: Mark Howland Rawitsch ; afterword by Lane Ryo Hirabayashi.

Resumo:

Discusses the little known early-twentieth century court battle of Jukichi and Ken Harada, Japanese immigrants, to keep their home in Riverside, California, which they purchased in 1915 in the names of their three young American-born children because the California Alien Land Law prohibited immigrants from owning real estate.

Críticas

Críticas editoriais

Nielsen BookData

"[A] highly engaging history of the California Japanese."<br>--Sandra Dallas, "The Denver Post<br>"

 
Críticas contribuídas por usuários
Recuperando críticas GoodReas...

Etiquetas

Seja o primeiro.
Confirmar esta solicitação

Você já pode ter solicitado este item. Por favor, selecione Ok se gostaria de proceder com esta solicitação de qualquer forma.

Dados Ligados


<http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/769429702>
library:oclcnum"769429702"
library:placeOfPublication
library:placeOfPublication
owl:sameAs<info:oclcnum/769429702>
rdf:typeschema:Book
rdfs:seeAlso
rdfs:seeAlso
rdfs:seeAlso
rdfs:seeAlso
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:about
schema:author
schema:copyrightYear"2012"
schema:datePublished"2012"
schema:description"Here Is Your Chance -- The Schoolteacher and the Samurai's Daughter -- Here to Stay -- In the Shadow of the Mission Inn -- Pilgrim's Progress -- Little Lamb Gone To Jesus -- The People of California Versus Harada -- World War and a Basket of Apples -- Face to Face -- Keep California White -- The Only Time I See the Sun -- Farewell to Riverside -- Leaving Lemon Street Behind -- Camp -- Blue Bandanas and an Ironwood Club -- From Issei to Nisei -- Questions of Loyalty -- It's Up To You, Medic -- Home -- Epilogue: Sumi's House -- Afterword -- Glossary of Japanese Terms."
schema:description"Discusses the little known early-twentieth century court battle of Jukichi and Ken Harada, Japanese immigrants, to keep their home in Riverside, California, which they purchased in 1915 in the names of their three young American-born children because the California Alien Land Law prohibited immigrants from owning real estate."
schema:genre"Case studies"
schema:genre"Biography"
schema:genre"Trials, litigation, etc."
schema:inLanguage"en"
schema:name"The house on Lemon Street : Japanese pioneers and the American dream"
schema:numberOfPages"388"
schema:publisher
rdf:typeschema:Organization
schema:name"University Press of Colorado"
Close Window

Por favor, conecte-se ao WorldCat 

Não tem uma conta? Você pode facilmente criar uma conta gratuita.