Signs of Home: The Paintings and Wartime Diary of Kamekichi Tokita

Signs of Home: The Paintings and Wartime Diary of Kamekichi Tokita

Signs of Home: The Paintings and Wartime Diary of Kamekichi Tokita

Signs of Home: The Paintings and Wartime Diary of Kamekichi Tokita

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Overview

A deeply moving account of life before, during, and after the Japanese internment as witnessed by a great Seattle artist

Issei artist Kamekichi Tokita emigrated from Japan in the early twentieth century and settled in Seattle’s Japanese American immigrant community. By the 1930s he was established as a prominent member of the Northwest art scene and allied with the region’s progressive artists. On the day Pearl Harbor was bombed Tokita started a diary that he vowed to keep until the war ended. In it he recorded with expressiveness and insight the events, fears, rumors, and restrictions—and his own emotional turmoil—before and during his detention at Minidoka.

This beautiful and poignant biography of Tokita uses his paintings and wartime diary to vividly illustrate the experiences, uncertainties, joys, and anxieties of Japanese Americans during the World War II internment and the more optimistic times that preceded it. It contextualizes Tokita’s paintings and diary within the art community and Japanese America and introduces readers to an amazing man who embraced life despite living through challenging and disheartening times.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780295749693
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Publication date: 08/31/2021
Series: Scott and Laurie Oki Series in Asian American Studies (Hardcover)
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 8.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Barbara Johns is a Seattle-based art historian and curator. Her many books include Paul Horiuchi: East and West and The Hope of Another Spring: Takuichi Fujii, Artist and Wartime Witness.

What People are Saying About This

Stephen H. Sumida

"There was a spirit in Kamekichi Tokita that scarcely vacillated in spite of the crises he confronted in his days and his diary. Tokita's art, his diary, his family, and his moral strengths are his legacies."

Martha Kingsbury

"Johns has produced an intricate and moving portrait of Tokita and a beautiful and unusual book."

From the Publisher

"Johns has produced an intricate and moving portrait of Tokita and a beautiful and unusual book."—Martha Kingsbury, author of George Tsutakawa

"There was a spirit in Kamekichi Tokita that scarcely vacillated in spite of the crises he confronted in his days and his diary. Tokita's art, his diary, his family, and his moral strengths are his legacies."—Stephen H. Sumida, from the Foreword

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