The First Strange Place
The Alchemy of Race and Sex in World War II Hawaii
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
Just as World War I introduced Americans to Europe, making an indelible impression on thousands of farmboys who were changed forever “after they saw Paree,” so World War II was the beginning of America’s encounter with the East – an encounter whose effects are still being felt and absorbed. No single place was more symbolic of this initial encounter than Hawaii, the target of the first unforgettable Japanese attack on American forces, and, as the forward base and staging area for all military operations in the Pacific, the “first strange place” for close to a million soldiers, sailors, and marines on their way to the horrors of war.
But as Beth Bailey and David Farber show in this evocative and timely book, Hawaii was also the first strange place on another kind of journey, toward the new American society that began to emerge in the postwar era. Unlike the largely rigid and static social order of prewar America, this was to be a highly mobile and volatile society of mixed racial and cultural influences, one above all in which women and minorities would increasingly demand and receive equal status. With consummate skill and sensitivity, Bailey and Farber show how these unprecedented changes were tested and explored in the highly charged environment of wartime Hawaii.
Most of the hundreds of thousands of men and women whom war brought to Hawaii were expecting a Hollywood image of “paradise.” What they found instead was vastly different: a complex crucible in which radically diverse elements – social, racial, sexual – were mingled and transmuted in the heat and strain of war. Drawing on the rich and largely untapped reservoir of documents, diaries, memoirs, and interviews with men and women who were there, the authors vividly recreate the dense, lush, atmosphere of wartime Hawaii – an atmosphere that combined the familiar and exotic in a mixture that prefigured the special strangeness of American society today.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this lively, evocative look at men and women who went to Hawaii from the mainland during WW II, Bailey and Farber, history professors at Barnard College in New York City, concentrate on how they sought to bridge the cultural and racial gaps that isolated them from the islanders. Representative malahini (newcomers) discussed here include a shipyard worker, an officer in charge of preparing Marines for the assault on Iwo Jima, an African American soldier who had to deal with a more complicated racism than he had encountered at home, an enterprising prostitute from Chicago and a military policeman assigned to Honolulu's Hotel Street, where the brothels were located. The study is novelistic in its revelation of character and sense of place.