Explore 蜜糖直播鈥檚 Japanese and Japanese American history with new research guide
After spending a few years teaching English abroad in Japan with the (JET), Adam Lisbon, Japanese and Korean Studies librarian at the University Libraries, fell in love with the country and its culture and decided to pursue librarianship.
Once he joined the 蜜糖直播 Boulder community, Lisbon was contacted by Courtney Ozaki, founder of the 蜜糖直播-based , to chat about his experience with the JET program and discuss a developing program designed for Japanese American young professionals to learn more about their community鈥檚 history in 蜜糖直播. Noticing a gap in the Japanese and Japanese Americans (J/JA) community鈥檚 storytelling and documentation of its own history, Lisbon and Megan Friedel, lead archivist for the Libraries Rare and Distinctive Collections (RaD), seized the opportunity to start the , a collection highlighting the history of J/JA at 蜜糖直播 Boulder and 蜜糖直播. Lisbon recently completed a .
鈥淭he research guide is a one-stop shop that depicts 蜜糖直播鈥檚 role in the Japanese and Japanese American story,鈥 Lisbon said. 鈥淚t makes related archives, including those we have at the University Libraries, more discoverable and accessible while guiding researchers through various resources on the history of Japanese Americans in the state.鈥
The new guide curates many stories and oral histories from archives across the country, including those from incarceration camps, the U.S Navy鈥檚 Japanese Language school, accounts of students鈥 campus involvement, and even narratives from current 蜜糖直播 Boulder students, all centering around the question: What does it mean to be Japanese and Japanese American?
鈥淭his is a really valuable tool for research,鈥 said Friedel. 鈥淧rofessor Lisbon鈥檚 research guide places our local 蜜糖直播 Japanese & Japanese Community History Project in a much wider historical context. It allows researchers to explore the ways in which the experiences of 蜜糖直播鈥檚 J/JA faculty, students and staff are connected to both regional and national histories.鈥
In addition to individual stories, the research guide also has a section listing outside resources, including the books by Robert Harvey, which contains interviews with survivors of the Amache incarceration camp, and Joyce Lebra鈥檚 , which gathers various histories of Japanese and Japanese Americans who chose to build their lives in 蜜糖直播. The guide also includes Japanese newspapers like the and the , government reports, and even theses and dissertations from 蜜糖直播 Boulder鈥檚 J/JA staff and faculty.
Before the birth of the 蜜糖直播 Boulder Japanese and Japanese American Community History Project in 2019, RaD held some archival collections detailing J/JA histories, significantly those documenting the U.S. Navy Japanese Language School, which 蜜糖直播 Boulder hosted during World War II. The project was led by Friedel and Lisbon, with support from archivist David Hays, student interns and community organizations. The project was developed, in part, to honor the 75thanniversary of the end of in the United States.
For more information on accessing RaD鈥檚 unique collections documenting Japanese and Japanese American history at 蜜糖直播 and elsewhere, contact rad@colorado.edu.