
Through Lange’s Lens: The Incarceration of Japanese Americans
Dorothea Lange was hired by the federal government in 1942 to document Japanese Americans as they were exiled from their homes on the West Coast and confined in detention camps. Her images of the exiles’ humanity offered a powerful critique of the incarceration program, to the point that her photographs were confiscated and censored for the duration of the war. In this talk, Meredith Oda explores Lange’s images to better understand her perspective and the experiences of the Japanese Americans forcibly removed from their homes and incarcerated without charge.
About Meredith Oda:
Meredith Oda is Grace A. Griffin Associate Professor in American History in the Department of History at the University of Nevada, Reno. A graduate of UC Berkeley and the University of Chicago, her work has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Huntington Library, and the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Chicago. Her first book, The Gateway to the Pacific: Japanese Americans and the Remaking of San Francisco (Chicago 2019) was a transpacific urban history of redevelopment in the city. She has also published scholarly articles as well as non-academic pieces in TIME magazine, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Nevada Humanities’ Double Down, and other popular outlets. Currently, she is working on a second book, People in Motion: Japanese American Incarceration and Resettlement during World War II, that explores the lives Japanese Americans remade as they left the detention centers.