Why the US photographed its own WWII concentration camps

52,014 ืฆืคื™ื•ืชยท 14/02/24
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Dorothea Langeโ€™s photos of the incarceration of Japanese Americans went largely unseen for decades.

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US President Franklin D. Roosevelt passed Executive Order 9066 in February 1942 โ€” two months after Japanโ€™s bombing of the US Navy base at Pearl Harbor. It empowered the US army to designate strategic โ€œmilitary areasโ€ from which any and all people deemed a threat could be forcibly removed. This began a process of placing 120,000 Japanese Americans in concentration camps during World War II.

To control the narrative around the removal, the government created a new department, the War Relocation Authority, and hired photographers to document the process. One of those photographers was Dorothea Lange, who had become famous during the 1930s for her Great Depression photographs for the Farm Security Administration.

Her images featured Japanese-American people in the weeks, days, and hours leading up to their incarceration in the camps, and captured expressions of dignity, resolve, and fear.

Most of Langeโ€™s candid photos of the removal process werenโ€™t approved for publication by the War Relocation Authority and were โ€œimpoundedโ€ for the duration of the war. They werenโ€™t seen again widely until 1972, when her former assistant pulled them from the National Archives for a museum exhibit about the incarceration of Japanese Americans, called Executive Order 9066.

The photos became part of a redress movement for Japanese Americans in the 1970s and 1980s, which ultimately resulted in the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, a bill that approved reparations for survivors of the camps.

Darkroom is a history and photography series that anchors each episode around a single image. Analyzing what the photo shows (or doesn't show) provides context that helps unravel a wider story. Watch previous episodes here: https://www.youtube.com/playli....st?list=PLJ8cMiYb3G5

Further reading:
Dorothea Langeโ€™s WRA photos at the University of California:
https://calisphere.org/collections/24123/?q=&sort=a&rq=dorothea%20lange

Dorothea Langeโ€™s WRA photos at the US National Archives:
https://catalog.archives.gov/search?q=%22lange%22&f.ancestorNaIds=536000&rows=100

Satsuki Inaโ€™s award-winning documentary, โ€œFrom a Silk Cocoonโ€:
https://www.fromasilkcocoon.com/

I interviewed Elena Tajima Creef for this story as well, check out her book โ€œImaging Japanese Americaโ€:
https://nyupress.org/978081471....6229/imaging-japanes

The Densho Encyclopedia, a rich resource for researching this topic:
https://encyclopedia.densho.org/

Denshoโ€™s terminology guide for talking about the incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII:
https://densho.org/terminology/

More information about language and semantics from NPR, specifically about the choice to refer to the camps as โ€œconcentration campsโ€ instead of โ€œinternment camps:โ€ https://www.npr.org/sections/p....ubliceditor/2012/02/

Linda Gordon and Gary Okihiroโ€™s book about Langeโ€™s WRA photos, โ€œImpoundedโ€:
https://wwnorton.com/books/9780393330908

Ansel Adamsโ€™s WRA-approved 1944 book of photos from the Manzanar camp, โ€œBorn Free and Equalโ€:
https://www.loc.gov/pictures/c....ollection/manz/book.


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