Japanese War Brides and the Normalization of Family Unification after World War II

2018 ◽  
pp. 231-254
Author(s):  
ARISSA H. OH
2010 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip E. Wolgin ◽  
Irene Bloemraad

The perceived need to re-unite military families after World War II, initially addressed by ad-hoc war-brides legislation, played a key role in the reformulation of U.S. immigration policy. The large number of military spouses, especially from Asia, pushed policymakers to revise their notions of racial admissibility, thus helping to establish family re-unification as the driving force behind immigration reform. Though unnoticed at the time, the combination of wartime service, patriotism, and marriage formed an inadvertent road map for the family-centric, and ultimately racially neutral, admissions policies that would dominate U.S. immigration law after 1965. The importance of Asian war brides in shaping the contours of U.S. policy stands in even stronger relief when compared to the relative unimportance of the issue in Canada, another major participant in World War II, which also pursued immigration reform during the 1960s.


Author(s):  
Laura E. Ruberto

This chapter explores U.S.-produced films from the first decades after World War II through two competing themes—World War II and Italian style—which together influenced how new Italian immigrant women were shaped on screen. The chapter argues that Italian American women had been previously gendered in cinematic representations, but that the gendering had occurred around issues of domesticity, religion, labor, and family rather than lasciviousness and exotica. However, these postwar films turned Italian actors such as Anna Magnani, Sophia Loren, and Pier Angeli into hyper-sexualized immigrant characters: provocatively out-of-place war brides, nannies, and prostitutes each sexually willing and exoticized through visual and narrative emphases on their bodies, physical abandon, and illicit behavior.


1996 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberly A. Lee ◽  
◽  
George E. Vaillant ◽  
William C. Torrey ◽  
Glen H. Elder

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine Boone ◽  
Frank C. Richardson
Keyword(s):  

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