10 Social Networks and the Development of Neighborhood Identities in Amache, a WWII Japanese American Internment Camp

April Kamp-Whittaker, Bonnie J. Clark
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

In 1942 Japanese Americans from the west coast of the United States were forcibly relocated to incarceration camps scattered across the interior of the country. Constructed by the Army Corp of Engineers and designed to house around 10,000 individuals, these centers followed a rigid, gridded layout that allowed for the rapid construction of what were ostensibly cities. Residential sections were laid out in blocks, each containing barracks buildings to which internees were assigned on arrival. Five seasons of intensive pedestrian survey at the Granada Relocation Center National Historic Landmark, Colorado (also known as Amache), accompanied by extensive oral histories, has determined that these residential blocks became neighborhoods with individual character and personalities. Archaeological and archival data are used to examine the development of neighborhood identities and examine the relative utility of different data sets in identifying social interaction as a proxy for neighborhood identities. Archaeological research at Amache reveals the physical modifications and artifacts found in residential blocks. Distinct differences in densities and types of artifacts along with the development of coordinated blockwide landscaping and centrally located communal features show that internees were developing neighborhood-based communities. These indicate the role that new social relationships, developed within the confines of camp, along with the influences of existing social ties and sets of behavioral traits, had on the formation of neighborhoods. This chapter uses social network data drawn from historic newspapers to examine the levels of interaction occurring between residents of the same residential block and between different areas of the camp. Social network data will be used to explore the role that social interaction had in the creation and maintenance of neighborhood identities. These different lines of data converge to highlight how neighborhoods defined by distinct sets of activities and residential traits were being formed within the institutional setting of Amache.

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二战日裔美国人拘留营阿马奇的社会网络和邻里身份的发展
1942年,来自美国西海岸的日裔美国人被强行转移到分散在美国内陆的集中营。这些中心由陆军工程兵团(Army Corp of Engineers)建造,设计容纳约1万人,遵循严格的网格布局,允许在表面上是城市的地方快速建设。住宅区以街区为单位,每个街区都有营房,被拘留者一到就被分配到营房。在科罗拉多州格拉纳达搬迁中心国家历史地标(也被称为Amache)进行的五个季节的密集行人调查,伴随着广泛的口述历史,确定了这些住宅街区成为具有个性和个性的社区。考古和档案数据被用来研究邻里身份的发展,并研究不同数据集在识别社会互动作为邻里身份代理方面的相对效用。阿马奇的考古研究揭示了在住宅区发现的物理改造和文物。在密度和人工制品类型上的明显差异,以及协调的街区景观和位于中心的公共特征的发展表明,被拘留者正在发展以邻里为基础的社区。这些表明了在营地范围内发展起来的新的社会关系,以及现有社会关系和行为特征的影响,对社区形成的作用。本章使用从历史报纸中提取的社会网络数据来检查同一住宅区居民之间和营地不同地区之间发生的互动水平。社会网络数据将用于探索社会互动在邻里身份的创造和维护中的作用。这些不同的数据线汇集在一起,突出了在Amache的制度环境中,由不同的活动和住宅特征定义的社区是如何形成的。
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