Item No: #361091 [Collected Works of Hanboku] Hanboku zenshu. Keizo Yusa, Hanboku.
[Collected Works of Hanboku] Hanboku zenshu

Funny Poems and Militarism in 1940

[Collected Works of Hanboku] Hanboku zenshu

Notes: "Assorted haiku, tanka, senryu, essays, anecdotes, and 'jokes' composed by Yusa Keizo, most of which are preceded by headnotes explaining the circumstances of composition. In addition, there are sections on: 1) the activities and membership of various organizations supporting the Japanese government in the 1930s; 2) eulogies in memory of Aratani Setsuo; and 3) Issei poetry published in the New Year's edition of the immigrant press from 1907 to 1940."—A Buried Past, 620.

"Mainly includes literary work by the author, but also includes descriptions of Japanese military support by Japanese in the United States, other people's poems, and report of Aratani Setsuo's funeral (1885-1940). According to forwards by various people, Hanboku was called a critic of Japanese society in the U.S."—JANM bibliography, 229.

In 2014, a facsimile edition was published in Japan as "Collected works of Hanboku, master of Japanese American humorous poems," however this book is most often cited in the academic literature for it's commentary on Japanese American view of Japan's militarism in the 1930s. The first plate is a halftone image of two airplanes purchased for the Japanese military with funds raised in Japanese immigrant communities.

Yusa was born in Japan about 1879. At the 1940 census, he was working as a farm laborer in Santa Maria, California, and living with his wife and a son, a dentist. He died on January 5, 1941 after being hit by a car.

[8], 47, 67, 77, 35, 533 pages, including a few halftone plates. Printed in Japan.

OCLC: 20275808, 683058565

Edition + Condition: First edition. Very good in the publisher's blue cloth in the original cardstock slipcase.

Publication: Santa Maria, CA: (the author), 1940 (Showa 15).

Item No: #361091

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