So Far From The Bamboo Grove Pdf Download

Posted on  by  admin
Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read.
Start by marking “So Far from the Bamboo Grove” as Want to Read:

So Far from the Bamboo Grove - E-book. Download the Bookshout App on iOS. Tell us more about what you like to read so we can send you the best offers and. Feb 16, 2018 - Full-Text Paper (PDF): Remembering or Misremembering? Historicity and the. Download full-text PDF. Watkins's semi-autobiographical So Far from the Bamboo Grove (1986), a novel focused on. The flight of. Bamboo Grove Ebook Download, Free So Far From The Bamboo Grove Download Pdf, Free. Pdf So Far From The Bamboo Grove Download. What Is Your.

Rate this book
1 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
Open Preview

See a Problem?

We’d love your help. Let us know what’s wrong with this preview of So Far from the Bamboo Grove by Yoko Kawashima Watkins.
Not the book you’re looking for?

Preview — So Far from the Bamboo Grove by Yoko Kawashima Watkins

(So Far from the Bamboo Grove #1)

Prequel to My Brother, My Sister, and I.

Though Japanese, eleven-year-old Yoko has lived with her family in northern Korea near the border with China all her life. But when the Second World War comes to an end, Japanese on the Korean peninsula are suddenly in terrible danger; the Korean people want control of their homeland and they want to punish the Japanese, who have o

...more
Or buy for
Published August 12th 2008 by HarperCollins (first published April 1st 1986)
More Details...
So Far from the Bamboo Grove
0688131158 (ISBN13: 9780688131159)
English
Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award Nominee (1988), Judy Lopez Memorial Award for Children's Literature Nominee (1987)
All EditionsAdd a New EditionCombine
...Less Detailedit details
To see what your friends thought of this book,please sign up.
To ask other readers questions aboutSo Far from the Bamboo Grove,please sign up.
Popular Answered Questions
Mary HollowellDuring WWII, Yoko, her mother, and her sister flee northeastern Korea and head for Seoul. They ride the rails and walk south on the tracks. Along the…moreDuring WWII, Yoko, her mother, and her sister flee northeastern Korea and head for Seoul. They ride the rails and walk south on the tracks. Along the way, Yoko is injured by a bomb, and they are forced to disguise themselves as communist soldiers.(less)
Best Female Heroine Books (or books centered around girls)
339 books — 254 voters
Korea in YA & Middle Grade Fiction
19 books — 18 voters

More lists with this book...
Rating details

Feb 09, 2010Melonbarmonster rated it did not like it
Yoko Watkins gives us a fictionalized account of her family's escape from North Korea at the end of World War II. However, she narrowly limits the historical setting and plot and avoids the moral issues surrounding her family's presence in Korea in the first place. Her family was in Korea as part of the Japanese imperial drive to conquer of Korea, China, the Pacific and even the western US. They were driven by a race based state religion that saw the Japanese Emperor as being a god and the Japan...more
Mar 23, 2013Tanja added it
This is the first time ever that I don't want to rate a book I have read - and this has nothing to do with the author's writing which I thought was very compelling. When I picked it up, I had no idea how controversial the novel had become over the years. For me it was just another book that caught my interest as I browsed our shelves. While reading, it didn't take long before I was in tears the first time - and decided then and there that the brutalities referred to in the book made it unsuitabl...more
I would like to give zero stars if possible. This book is full of lies but Yoko Kawashima writes it like it's her autobiography. I can't believe that this was once recommended to American students. Japanese soldiers were the ones who abused Korean women, not the reverse. During the time period she stayed in North Korea, there were no communist soldiers yet. America had ordered Japanese soldiers to stay and keep the country in order (although they had already surrendered to them) until American s...more
So Far from the Bamboo Grove was spectacular! This memoir reminds me much of the story of Anne Frank because of both of their inner-self. If I were to be in Anne Frank's or Yoko Kawashima(the main character in So Far From The Bamboo Grove) and I was in the middle of World War II going on and I have to travel from one place to another, I would be with my family, but I wouldn't be in the same home I have lived, grew up, and created memories in; I would be in a place that was half-comfortable to me...more
My teacher in middle school, made this a required reading. Ever since reading the first page, it is one of my all time favorite books. It changed my life. Right before reading it my mother died of cancer when I was 12. I didn't know what cremation meant until I read this book. Although that isn't what this story is about, it meant a great deal to me. I love this book, one I will read over again in a heartbeat.
Sep 14, 2010Mrs. Mengedoth rated it it was amazing
I love reading books that are based on true stories, and this one had me from the beginning. Yoko is a Japanese girl living in Korea during World War II. As the war is about to end, her family realizes they need to leave the country and get back to Japan. Her journey is remarkable! This novel allowed me to see life during the war from a young Japanese girl's persepective. Yoko is a character I will never forget.
100% curious - would this book be so lauded in America today if it was written by a 2nd gen German-American immigrant who was the child of a German official fleeing Nazi-occupied France in the aftermath of WWII? Would the writer's description of scary US soldiers and angry French mobs attacking her family for no reason seem a little short-sighted and forgetful of history? I'm genuinely intrigued by the people who would denounce this book if it was written from a European perspective but sing pra...more
Apr 01, 2009angrykitty rated it it was ok
i was looking at possible books for teachers to teach, and i came across this title, so i did what i always do when i'm unfamiliar with a title, i went to amazon.com and looked at it's summary. much to my surprise, there were great reviews along with some really negative ones with real specific beefs. i'm finding that the beefs are pretty well founded....
this book wasn't bad, but if it's taught without a little history, the koreans look like total barbarians. it's unfortunate that at the end of
...more
Jun 08, 2015Michelle rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Downgrading my rating from 3.5 stars to 1 star. Upon reading, I thought this was historical fiction. But alas, it is just fiction. The military actions mentioned never took place. I feel misled by this book. If you want a researched historical fiction account of this time, When My Name Was Keoko by Linda Sue Park would be my recommendation.
Jan 31, 2015Jameth15 rated it it was amazing
I originally read this book in middle school. The author lived in the next town over, so she came to my school and read the book to us. Later there was Q&A and it was a very memorable experience. Yoko even autographed copies of her book for us kids. This was a great book and it tought me about life in a different time and place.
Jul 05, 2009Erin rated it it was amazing
Shelves: classroom-library, non-fiction, middle-grade
This rainy fourth of july was actually the first time I read this children's classic. I found it a profoundly moving novel, and I would certainly recommend it to my students. It sheds a different light on our Japanese 'enemies' during World War II, and it reminds us of the essential humanity of all people, which often gets lost and/or forgotten in the heat of battle.
I read it during my childhood and it was one of the most inspiring, meaningful books i read. The book is a true page-turner. Back then, I recommended reading it to everyone i knew!
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.

So Far From The Bamboo Grove

Yoko Kawashima Watkins’ fictionalized experience, So Far From the Bamboo Grove, is marked as one of the most raw and revealing stories I have ever been captivated with. As an autobiographical piece, the novel details her family’s fleeing from North Korea following WWII as they were only there as a part of the Japanese imperialistic tactics. This memoir parallels other WWII memoirs as it is organized in a way that shows the progression of the family’s life as they escape from North Korea and seek...more
Since my mother's family was in Manchuria and afterwards China during World War 2, I've been familiar with some incidents described in this non-fiction novel. While she doesn't like to talk much about her experiences on the way back to her homeland, Japan, I occasionally learnt her segmented stories about the escape, which were definitely harsh experiences to a ten-year-old girl at that time.
But my mother was lucky. She had her father together all along their escape from China’s continent. But t
...more
Download

So Far From The Bamboo Grove Summary

Mar 03, 2009Heidi rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: from-library-whs, by-nwp, 50books-poc-rnd2, fiction-young-adult, fiction, history-asian, memoir-or-biography, fiction-historical, history-wwii
Having read When my name was Keoko, which was the Korean point of view on the Japanese occupation of Korea, I then picked up this book, 'So far from the Bamboo Grove', the first in a two volume autobiographical novel series by Yoko Kawashima Watkins, a Japanese girl who grew up in Korea, the child of a member of the Japanese ruling class. When the war began to go badly for the Japanese, and the Korean Communist party/forces attack the Japanese colonialists, Yoko, her mother and sister leave and...more
I gave this a read b/c I wanted to see why Koreans hate it so much. They go nuts over it b/c it portrays Japanese folks in a kind light while also showing some of the evil potential of Koreans taking out their anger on their previous controllers upon war's end.
Surely that happened to some degree, but Koreans will likely continue thinking that they were perfect angels upon liberation and every point after that.
The book bothers me because it is supposed to be autobiographical fiction, the 'fiction
...more
Sep 26, 2011Taelor Threadgill rated it it was amazing
The theme for this book is taking place around the time of the vietnam war. When Japan is under attack by Korean gorillas, Japanese families spring to action. 8 year old Yoko Kawshima is on the run for her birth Place, Japan. She is running with her mother and sister on voyage to safety. Yoko had long beutiful, black hair, as well as her mother and sister, before it became to dangerous to be traveling as women and girls. So they shaved it all off. Yoko is motivated to get to Japan and finally me...more
Jan 15, 2016Sarah Crawford rated it really liked it
What caused me to review this specific book was an article in the Japan Times on-line site, dated Jan. 18, 2007, and entitled Book Claims Koreans Raped Japanese. My review of that article is in my current events section on atrocities.
I wanted to see if what the people were objecting to was really there. The book is about Yuko's mother and older sister fleeing from North Korea, trying to get to the south and away from the Korean Communists.
Very early in the book Yuko and the others are treated al
...more
Sep 26, 2011Stephanie Ochoa rated it really liked it
This book is about a family who has to leave their home in Nanam, Korea to go to Seoul, Korea, because of the World War ll that Japan had just entered in 1942. The family are the main characters: Yoko, Ko, Hideyo, and their mother. People who aren't family but main characters in this book are: the Corporal Matsumura, the school's janitor, Mr.Naido, and the Korean Communist soldiers. There are some characters in the book that aren't main characters like: hideyo's friend's, and the spoiled school...more
So Far from the Bamboo Groove is a good book about a family on a journey Their father is fighting in a war right now,and their brother.He is actually running from soldiers to get to Japan and find his family. his family are in Korea looking like boys to protect from being hurt or killed.While in Japan the 2 girls(yoko and sister) live in a train station and go to school,and while at school the kids at school make fun of them because they go to school looking all ugly.while there at school their...more
Nov 03, 2010Brooke rated it really liked it
Based on the experiences of the author during
World War II, it is the story of two Japanese sisters and their mother escaping Korea and then trying to survive as paupers and eventually orphans in Japan.
What touched me most was when I gave it to my WW II veteran father to read. I thought he might find it interesting since he served in Japan as a Marine and later as a LDS missionary. I did not know/remember he had actually been in Kyoto. He remembers being told as a marine not to give any of the
...more
Nov 08, 2015Cathi95 rated it really liked it
(Historical, nonfiction 1986) This was recommended by the elementary school librarian where I repair books. There is so much I did NOT know about World War II! This story begins in Korea, just as Japan is bombed by the USA. At that time, Japan had control over Korea, and the Korean people revolt against that control. The story is written through the eyes of 11-year-old Yoko Kawashi. She, her older sister and her mother are forced to flee their home in Korea by the uprising, and make their way to...more
Sep 27, 2011Lizbeth Robles rated it really liked it
I really enjoyed So far from the bamboo grove. I thought it was really interesting and gave alot of details like if i was actually seeing what was happenig during world war II. The situation in the book was really harsh, because yoko(the main charachter of the book)only being 11 years old had to struggle with her honarble mother and honarble sister, to find food, shelter, and still had to be traveling to get to Seoul then to pusan when they were forsed to flee their contry. Then trying to find b...more
I'm currently reading this with my 6th grade students. They are enjoying it and are amazed that the central character, who is their age, is able to deal with the desperate situation in which she finds herself. Set in Korea and Japan at the very end of World War II, it gives Western students a glimpse of the war in Asia from the perspective of a young Japanese girl caught in the aftermath of the war. SHe and her family must make their way from Korea back to Japan where, once there, they find life...more
Amazing book and very inspirational, it teaches you that no matter how hard life gets you have to keep fighting. I adored the constant imagery throughout this book, it gives you a visual, and makes you feel as if you're in that exact moment. The story is heartbreaking but their desire to turn things around and make the situation better is what made this book so great.
Apr 16, 2009Rachelle rated it it was amazing
This book is so powerful. The imagery is vivid, but some parts may be a bit hard for students. I do not think that is a reason to hold this book back from students though. The glimpse into history by a child their own age can really help a student connect with history. People are what make history interesting, not facts and dates.
Dec 31, 2016David rated it really liked it · review of another edition
As a work of writing, I thought this was a beautiful and compelling story. That's completely aside from the allegations of inaccuracies, unfair demonization of Koreans, and so on. Looking at it on its own in isolation, which is all I'm really able to do, I got into it quite a bit.
I don't really have a thing for historical books, but this one was okay, and I thought that it was pretty inspirational and depressing at times because all of the deaths really happened.
Mar 17, 2019Sandra rated it it was amazing
Shelves: biography-autobiography-memoir, nonfiction, ya-nonfiction
What a good read! The first time I tried, it didn't appeal to me. I think it's that Japanese spare style of writing; 'We did this, and then we did this. I was unhappy because they were mean.' But after reading Haruki Murakami, and also, as odd as it might seem, Marie Kondo (known for her books on tidying), it just seems like the Japanese voice to me now. Maybe?
Anyway, it's the true story of Yoko Kawashima and her family, who have to leave Korea in a hurry when it becomes clear that Japan is los
...more
topics posts views last activity
New perspective 4 24Feb 03, 2012 03:40PM
Recommend ItStatsRecent Status Updates
See similar books…
See top shelves…
24followers
Yoko Kawashima Watkins was born in Japan in 1933. Her family lived in Manchuria, a region in northern china where her father was stationed as a Japanese government official. This region of China had been under Japanese control since 1931. The family later moved to Nanam in northern Korea, where her father was overseeing Japanese political interests. Japan had taken control of Korea in 1910. Althou...more
So Far from the Bamboo Grove(2 books)
More quizzes & trivia...
“When this book [So Far From The Bamboo Grove] was accepted for publication, a writer friend told Yoko that now she would be competing with other writers. Yoko said, No, she would not compete with anyone for anything. 'I competed with life and death when young,' she said. 'And I won.' ... Here is the story of her victory.” — 0 likes
“When this book [So Far From The Bamboo Grove] was accepted for publication, a writer friend told Yoko that now she would be competing with other writers. Yoko said, No, she would not compete with anyone for anything. 'I competed with life and death when young,' she said. 'And I won.' ... Here is the story of her victory.” — 0 likes
More quotes…Jump to navigationJump to search
So Far from the Bamboo Grove
AuthorYoko Kawashima Watkins
Cover artistLeo & Diane Dillon
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreWar novel, Autobiographical novel
PublisherWilliam Morrow
Publication date
April 1986
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages192 pp
ISBN978-0-688-13115-9
OCLC426064992
LC ClassPZ7.W3235 So 1994
Followed byMy Brother, My Sister, and I

So Far from the Bamboo Grove is a semi-autobiographical novel written by Yoko Kawashima Watkins, a Japanese American writer.[1] It was originally published by Beech Tree in April 1986.

Watkins was awarded the Literary Lights for Children Award by Associates of the Boston Public Library in 1998 and the Courage of Conscience Award by the Peace Abbey.[2][3]

Watkins's book takes place in the last days of 35 years of Korea and Japan annexation. An eleven-year-old Japanese girl, Yoko Kawashima, whose father works for the Japanese government, must leave her home in Nanam, part of northern Korea, as her family escapes south to Seoul, then to Busan, to return to Japan.

  • 3Controversy
  • 4Historical inaccuracies

Plot Summary[edit]

The story begins with Yoko Kawashima (and her mother, brother and sister) living in Nanam. Yoko is 11 years old living in North Korea during World War II while their father works as a Japanese government official in Manchuria, China. As the War draws towards a close, Yoko and her family realizes the danger of their situation and attempts to escape back to Japan as Communists troops close in on North Korea.

Her brother, Hideyo, also tries to leave but he is separated from his family because he has to serve at an ammunition factory for six days a week. The women of the family board a train to Seoul using a letter from a family diplomat but their trip is cut short by a bomb 45 miles away from Seoul. Yoko is injured from the bombing and the women are forced to walk the rest of the way. After receiving treatment in Seoul, the Yoko, her sister, and mother board a train to Busan, and then a ship to Japan.

When Yoko, her sister Ko, and her mother reached Fukuoka, Japan it is not the beautiful, comforting, welcoming place Yoko has dreamed of. Once again, they find themselves living in a train station scrounging in the garbage of others for food to survive. Eventually Yoko's mother travels to Kyoto to find her family. She then leaves for Aomori to seek help from their grandparents who she discovers are both dead. Their mother dies on the same day, leaving Yoko and Ko waiting for their brother, Hideyo. Their mother's last words were to keep their wrapping cloth where she had hidden money for her children.

Yoko begins to attend a new school where she enters and wins an essay contest with a cash prize. News of her winning the contest is reported in the newspaper. Hideyo and the Korean family who took bid farewell and Hideyo finally reaches Busan where he finds the message left to him by Yoko. After reaching Japan, he sees signs with his name and Yoko and Ko's address. While asking directions from locals, he is spotted by Yoko and they are reunited.

Kawashima also wrote a sequel titled My Brother, My Sister, and I.

Translations[edit]

A Korean version of this book titled Yoko iyagi (요코이야기, 'Yoko's tale') was published in 2005 and sold 4,000 copies of the first printing.[4] However, it was banned soon after.

So Far From The Bamboo Grove Summary

A Japanese version of this book, Takebayashi haruka tōku : Nihonjin shōjo Yōko no sensō taikenki (竹林はるか遠く : 日本人少女ヨーコの戦争体験記, 'Bamboo grove far distant: Japanese girl Yōko's war experience account') became available in June 2013.[5] As of June 7, 2013, the book was at No. 1 on the Amazon Best Sellers in Books in Japan.[6]

Controversy[edit]

Response in Korea[edit]

When this book was published in Korea as Yoko iyagi (요코 이야기, 'Yoko's tale') in 2005, the sales were brisk partly due to a sales copy that said 'why was this book banned in China and Japan?', but there was not much discernable social uproars about it.[7][8]

In a bamboo grove pdf

There had even been positive reviews written about it, accepting the book as delivering an anti-war and anti-colonial message.[9][10]

The situation completely changed in 2007, when it became a target of intense debate in Korea and in the United States. This development was triggered by the protests lodged by Korean-American students in the Greater Boston area in September, 2006.[11]

Response in Boston[edit]

The issue came to head after 2006, when 13 parents in a Greater Boston community urged the book be removed from the English curriculum of Dover-Sherborn Middle School, resulting in the convening of a schools committee which recommended a suspension of the book in November 2017.[12] The book was later reinstated at the school, to be used in a modified curriculum.[13]

The Boston Globe recapped the parents' perception of the book as being 'racist and sexually explicit'. Both views were articulated by one parent in particular. The rape of Japanese refugee women by 'Korean men' was disturbing, and he worried such a depiction could impart a stereotyped view on Korean men's treatment towards women to impressionable young minds.[a][12] Broaching the subject of rape in the classrooms in this age group was inappropriate as well.[b][12]

A Boston councilman[c] also weighed in, stating that the Korean minority were being portrayed as the 'bad guys', even though Japan was the one who had occupied Korea.[12] Given in narrative from the standpoint of the Japanese woman turned refugee at the end of World II, the book was felt as a distortion of the Korean experience under the colonial rule by Japan.[14]

The policies of the colonial rule that went unmentioned in the story included military draft and conscription of Koreans, as well as the killing and wounding of thousands of Koreans by the occupiers.[12]

Among staunch supporters of the book and author were teachers and parents, and they maintained that the book was an effective teaching tool and spoke out against censorship.[12] Even though vote was unanimous for suspending the book, the head of the panel acknowledged that the book could be taught in principle, if the issues could be addressed in the classroom, but they made the judgment call that the additional time made this impracticable.[12] And the ban was later revoked,[13] as already stated.

Other schools[edit]

Even prior to the Dover-Sherborn Middle School's decision to suspend the book, there have been other challenges tracked by The American Library Association,[12] some of which have been successful in removing the book from the curriculum and reading lists. Rye Country Day School in New York had acted swiftly by banning the book in September, 2006.[13]

One Catholic school and one private school, both in Massachusetts removed the book from their curricula in 2007.[13] A teacher at the latter[d] wrote an opinion on the book which appeared in The English Journal.[15]

The school board of Montgomery County, Maryland struck the book off its recommended list in March, 2007.[16]

Author expresses contrition[edit]

The author said that she had no intention to disregard the history of Korea and apologized for any hard feelings felt by Korean readers. She stated her intention was to portray her childhood experiences in a softer way for young readers. She denied the accusations made by the Korean newspapers.[17][18]

Historical inaccuracies[edit]

The Korean media has characterized her book as 'autobiographical fiction'. It has believed there are several points of historical inaccuracies in her account. Certain 'Korean historians' (unspecified) charge that some of her narrated incidents are imagined. However, the author insists she wrote her experience as she remembered it.[17]

U. S. bombers[edit]

Watkins gives in her book an account of sighting U. S. B-29 bombers (identified as that type by Mr. Enomoto). This has been characterized as suspect, since according to historians, there were no bombing in the area in July or August 1945. To which, the author retorted that she did not go so far as to say these airplanes bombard her hometown of Nanam (Rannam).[17]

In fact, U.S. bombers were flying missions to the general area of Korea by this time, according to Yoshio Morita's book on evacuation from Korea: 'From July 12 [1945] onward, American B-29's came almost every other day and regularly around 11:AM assaulting Rajin and Ungi [ja] in Northeast Korea, dropping many mines into the harbor'.[e][19]

As for the airplane attack on the train Yoko was aboard, although she never identifies the aircraft as American, Chapter 2.[20] The media cast suspicion on this passage as anachronisic, since 'American military did not bomb any part of North Korea during the time frame of the story'.[21] The train was stalled by the attack 45 miles before reaching Seoul,[22]

Korean communist presence[edit]

Also, when pressed, she admitted she could not identify the armed uniformed militia that her family encountered as definitively 'Korean Communists',[17] although that was the label she has given to her posing threat throughout the book.,[22] She explained that this had been the assumption she had made after hearing that the areas left behind in her trail had been overrun by communists. The book, in a different context,[f] describes the mother telling Yoko that Koreans had formed what is known as an 'Anti-Japanese Communist Army'.[g][23]

Harvard historian Carter Eckert had considered these points, and stated the only organized Korean 'Communist Army' around this time would have been the guerillas led by Soviet-trained Kim Il Sung, who 'did not arrive in Korea until early September 1945', but there might have been 'local Korean communist groups' present.[24]

Actually however, there was already a report that on August 8,[h] that a Korean contingent of 80-men strong was spotted with the Soviet Army, crossing the border into To-ri (土里; Japanese:Dori).[i][25] It was only a short distance by speedboat across the Tumen River for them to arrive from Russia to this town.[25][j]

'Korean Communist soldiers' were bereft of their uniforms for Yoko, her sister, and mother to use as disguise in the book.[k][22] Some media coverage gave a forced reading saying this term can only have applicable meaning as soldiers of the 'Korean People's Army', not established until 1948, so that Yoko was describing uniforms nonexistent at the time.[21]

See also[edit]

Explanatory notes[edit]

  1. ^Exact language in Kocian's piece in the Boston Globe: '..it will be the students' first exposure to Asian history'; and 'You'll notice throughout the book these acts are committed by Korean men -- it is a pretty disturbing connotation of a group of people',... 'The first impression you imprint in a child's mind is typically very hard to erase'.
  2. ^He also criticized the teaching protocol for using this material without seeking parental consent.
  3. ^Sam Yoon. To him, the Dover parents who were not actually his constituents, as the Kiang & Tang (2009) study noted.
  4. ^Friends Academy, North Dartmouth, Massachusetts.
  5. ^Quote in Japanese:「[二十年]七月十二日以後、沖縄を基地とするアメリカのB29は、ほとんど隔日に、しかもきまって午後十一時ごろ、東北鮮の羅津、雄基に来襲し、そのつど多数の機雷を港内に投下していた。それ以前には'」
  6. ^In relation to the army eminent domaining some farmers' lands to expand its hospital.
  7. ^'Anti-Japanese Communist Army' (kōnichi kyōsangun, 抗日共産軍) has been used elsewhere to designate the China's People's Liberation Army. The Japanese of course would not dignify using Communist China's official name as the people's army.
  8. ^The day Russia formally declared war on Japan
  9. ^They group assaulted a police station in To-ri, and killed two Japanese officers.
  10. ^This town was about 60 miles north of Nanam, where Yoko lived.
  11. ^The locations is several nights' walk closer to Seoul than where their train derailed.

References[edit]

  1. ^Silvey, Anita (1995). Children's books and their creators. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 351. ISBN978-0-395-65380-7.
  2. ^'Literary Lights for Children'. The Boston Public Library. Archived from the original on 2014-01-07.
  3. ^'Courage of Conscience Award Recipients'. The Peace Abbey. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10.
  4. ^`한국인 日소녀 강간` 美교재 국내 출간 (in Korean). 매경닷컴. 2007-01-17.
  5. ^竹林はるか遠く―日本人少女ヨーコの戦争体験記 (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. Archived from the original on 2013-12-04.
  6. ^ベストセラー [Best Sellers] (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. Archived from the original on 2013-06-07.
  7. ^Lee (H. K.) (2014), p. 38.
  8. ^Kim, Michael (December 2010). 'The Lost Memories of Empire and the Korean Return from Manchuria, 1945-1950: Conceptualizing Manchuria in Modern Korean History'(PDF). Seoul Journal of Korean Studies. 23 (11): 195–223.
  9. ^Choi, Hyeon-mi (최현미) (2005-05-09). 日소녀가 본 日패망 풍경 : ‘요코 이야기’… 식민정책 비판 등 담아 [A japanese girl's glimpse of defeated Japan: 'Yoko's Tale' includes criticism of colonial policy]. Minwa Ilbo.
  10. ^Review in Yonhap News (March 3, 2005), cited by Kim (M.), p. 197, n5
  11. ^Lee (H. K.) (2014), p. 38–39.
  12. ^ abcdefghKocian, Lisa (Nov 12, 2006). 'Ban book from class, panel says'. The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on 2012-10-22.
  13. ^ abcdPark Chung-a (Jan 23, 2007). 'US: More American schools stop textbook falsifying Korea'. Korea Times. Archived from the original on 2012-03-22.
  14. ^Kiang & Tang (2009), pp. 88–89.
  15. ^Walach, Stephen (January 2008), 'So Far from the Bamboo Grove: Multiculturalism, Historical Context, and Close Reading'(PDF), The English Journal, 97 (3)JSTOR30046824
  16. ^'Korean Americans Win Victory Over WWII Novel'. Chosunilbo. March 19, 2007.
  17. ^ abcd'Controversial author stands by story of her war ordeal'. JoongAng Daily. February 2, 2007. Archived from the original on 2011-07-18.
  18. ^왜곡 아니다 … 한국인에 상처준 건 죄송 (in Korean). JOINS. February 3, 2007. Archived from the original on 2009-09-09.
  19. ^Morita (1964), p. 28–29, possibly from cited source, Kitamura, Tomekichi/Ryūkichi, Razu dasshutsu no omoide 羅津脱出の思い出. Kitamura was buyun (府尹, 부윤) or city magistrate of Razu. (in Japanese)
  20. ^Watkins (1994), Chapter 2.
  21. ^ ab'Korean Parents Angry over 'Distorted' U.S. School Book'. Chosunilbo. January 18, 2007.
  22. ^ abcWatkins (1994), Chapter 3.
  23. ^Watkins (1994), p. 9.
  24. ^Eckert, Carter (December 16, 2006). 'A Matter of Context'. The Boston Globe. Boston Globe. Archived from the original on 2009-09-10.
  25. ^ abMorita (1964), pp. 28–29.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Kiang, Peter; Tang, Shirley (2009), Collet; Lien (eds.), 'Transnational Dimensions of Community Empowerment: The Victories of Chanrithy Uong and Sam Yoon', The Transnational Politics of Asian Americans, Temple University Press, pp. 88–91pdf
  • Lee, Hye Kyoung (李恵慶) (2014). 'Tekusuto wo uragiru tekusuto: Takebayashi haruka tōku ni okeru sensō no kioku to kioku no sensō' テクストを裏切るテクスト―『sensō 』における戦争の記憶と記憶の戦争 [Memory, Nostalgia and Nationalism: Unlocking The Textual Unconsious in Yoko Kawashima Watkins's So Far From The Bamboo Grove] (PDF). Asia-Pacific Review アジア太平洋レビュー (11): 38–52. (published by the Osaka University of Economics and Law) (in Japanese)
  • Morita, Yoshio (森田芳夫) (1964). Chōsen shūsen no kiroku: Bei So ryōgun to nihonjin no hikiage朝鮮終戦の記錄: 米ソ両軍の進駐と日本人の引揚. Gannando.(in Japanese)
  • Watkins, Yoko Kawashima (1994) [1986]. So Far from the Bamboo Grove. Harper Collins. ISBN978-0-6881-3115-9.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=So_Far_from_the_Bamboo_Grove&oldid=894650367'
Categories:
Hidden categories:
Coments are closed
Scroll to top