Memory Crafting: How Do We Remember the Unspeakable, A Yonsei Perspective

Workshops & Classes

Memory Crafting: How Do We Remember the Unspeakable, A Yonsei Perspective

Memory Crafting: How Do We Remember the Unspeakable, A Yonsei Perspective

Workshops & Classes

Memory Crafting: How Do We Remember the Unspeakable, A Yonsei Perspective

SOLD OUT

FREE

Our community and cultural institutions, researchers, family members, artists, and many others have created priceless archives of Japanese American history. The effort to preserve, with tremendous contributions from many generations in our community, have given Yonsei, Gosei, and future generations important resources to learn and understand our community history, especially surrounding incarceration during World War II.

Once the stories are preserved and archives constructed, what comes next? What does it mean that youth (Yonsei and Gosei) of today in most families are the last generations to personally know survivors of concentration camps? How does the act of remembering collective history continue and/or change as it passes through generations?

This workshop will invite attendees to immerse themselves in acts of memory and memory crafts. “Memory crafting” are activities, exercises, and ways of constructing gatherings that help transform facts and knowledge of history into practices of memory. Presenter, Nikiko Masumoto, co-founder of Yonsei Memory Project (based in the Central Valley) will share insights from their three years of work.

This program is free in conjunction with the Transcendients Community Celebration: Challenging Borders event, but space is limited so RSVPs are strongly encouraged at the link below.

This workshop is now full. If you are attending the Transcendients Community Celebration and are interested in participating in the workshop, please check at the Nerio Education Center at 1:45 p.m. to see if any spaces are available.

Read Discover Nikkei’s interview with Nikiko Masumoto about the Yonsei Memory Project.

In the Nerio Education Center

Free

Saturday, Mar 07, 2020

2:00 PM - 3:30 PM PST

Japanese American National Museum

100 North Central Avenue

Los Angeles, CA 90012

SOLD OUT

FREE

Our community and cultural institutions, researchers, family members, artists, and many others have created priceless archives of Japanese American history. The effort to preserve, with tremendous contributions from many generations in our community, have given Yonsei, Gosei, and future generations important resources to learn and understand our community history, especially surrounding incarceration during World War II.

Once the stories are preserved and archives constructed, what comes next? What does it mean that youth (Yonsei and Gosei) of today in most families are the last generations to personally know survivors of concentration camps? How does the act of remembering collective history continue and/or change as it passes through generations?

This workshop will invite attendees to immerse themselves in acts of memory and memory crafts. “Memory crafting” are activities, exercises, and ways of constructing gatherings that help transform facts and knowledge of history into practices of memory. Presenter, Nikiko Masumoto, co-founder of Yonsei Memory Project (based in the Central Valley) will share insights from their three years of work.

This program is free in conjunction with the Transcendients Community Celebration: Challenging Borders event, but space is limited so RSVPs are strongly encouraged at the link below.

This workshop is now full. If you are attending the Transcendients Community Celebration and are interested in participating in the workshop, please check at the Nerio Education Center at 1:45 p.m. to see if any spaces are available.

Read Discover Nikkei’s interview with Nikiko Masumoto about the Yonsei Memory Project.

In the Nerio Education Center

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