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- Name: Hist.txt
- Subject: Canadian History
- Title: A review of Obasan
- Grade: 75%
- System: College
- Age: 18
- Country: Canada
- Comments: Good book review of the novel Obasan
- Language: English
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- I decided to read the novel by Joy Kogawa entitled Obasan. The
- novel was written in 1981 and told the details of how the Japanese were
- discriminated against during World War 2. The authorÆs main purpose was
- to educated the reader on how hard life really was for her family and
- other Japanese Canadians living in British Columbia, and especially in
- Vancouver. Joy Kogawa tried to show how ignorant British Columbians
- really were, and that we still do not fully understand what really
- happened during the war. She also tries to teach Canadians the culture
- of the Japanese.
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- The novel starts in the seventies with Naomi a teacher in
- Northern Alberta finding out that her uncle has died. When Naomi returns
- home to console her Aunt Obasan, she begins to relive the difficulties of
- her life. She recounts the struggle against the government and
- themselves while trying to stay in Vancouver. Naomi is very small at the
- time of the war and did not really fully understand what was happening to
- her race. The novel recounts the struggle of NaomiÆs Aunt Emily to
- ensure that her family would be together in whatever place they were sent
- to. Aunt Emily wanted to head east to Toronto, but was unable to get the
- documentation for the entire family which included her sister children,
- who she was taking care of. The novel discuses the camps that the
- Japanese families were sent to in Hastings Park during the war. It
- described the treatment the families received while there, including the
- lack of food and the smell of manure. Naomi during this time was being
- sexually molested by her next door neighbor and did not tell anybody
- about this. Naomi seems resentful during the novel, as she comes across
- as a quiet little girl, who does not seem to interact with many people.
- Aunt Emily finally finds a place in Slocan for the family to go live, but
- just before they leave finds out her and her immediate family could go to
- Toronto. This leaves Aunt Emily going to Toronto and everybody else
- moving to Toronto. In the end almost everybody ends up dying.
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- The novel had many strengths and weaknesses. One strength that
- really got to me is the great detail in how the Japanese were treated,
- though they were Canadian citizens. Obasan also taught me a lot about
- the Japanese culture and background. I enjoyed learning that it was
- custom to take a bath with your family when you were younger. I also
- learned that the government took away the vehicles of the Japanese and
- auctioned them off, which really shocked me. Joy Kogawa also brought in
- a good insight about what the Japanese Canadians were really feeling and
- going through during these tough times.
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- On the flip side there were also many weaknesses in the book
- Obasan. One major weakness was the failure to distinguish between
- present time and the past. There were to many times that I did not
- realize that Naomi had switched into a flashback or vice versa. This
- left me rereading many pages over. I also did not like the way that the
- novel would drag on. It sometimes failed to have much to do with the
- rest of the story, and is to wordy. I believe the story could have been
- told in about one hundred and eighty pages instead of the two hundred and
- fifty pages. I think that the novel could have also gone into a little
- more detail about the living conditions at Hastings Park, and also a
- political aspect of why this was happening to these people.
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- All and all I would have to say this novel helped me a lot in
- understanding what happened during the Second World War. Before reading
- this novel, I would have to admit that I really did not even know this
- happened in Canada, which is really sad. I did know though that the
- Japanese in the United States were sent from the west coast, but did not
- realize that it reached the west coast of Canada. Obasan is a very good
- novel for anybody who did not know what happened during the Second World
- War. I would recommend this novel to all Canadians, but especially to
- British Columbians. Obasan was on the most part well written and gives
- an excellent account of the Japanese reviews. Obasan was a good novel to
- help better understand our Canadian history.
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- WPCç