manzanar baseball team photo with camp barracks collage in photo

講演&シンポジウム

POSTPONED: Manzanar Baseball Project

manzanar baseball team photo with camp barracks collage in photo

講演&シンポジウム

POSTPONED: Manzanar Baseball Project

このイベントについて

EVENT UPDATE

This program has been rescheduled for December 7, 2024. Please check back on the website for more details.

Thank you and apologies for any inconvenience caused.

     

During the 1940s, baseball was the national pastime of the US, including in America’s World War II concentration camps. Japanese Americans created leagues in all ten camps and the games drew huge crowds, with spectators often standing and sitting on bare dirt under the blazing sun. Baseball was a way for Japanese Americans to find a sense of normalcy, uplift their spirits, and claim a connection to American culture. 

Today the Manzanar Baseball Project is rebuilding and bringing to life the diamond at Manzanar National Historic Site. Artist and Project Director Dan Kwong will be joined by Josh Morey, Bobby Umemoto, Chris Komai, and Prof. Susan Kamei in conversation about this compelling project, the rich history of Japanese Americans and baseball, and how they came to overlap in this often overlooked chapter of our nation’s history.

 

Not a current member? Join or renew now for free admission.

Image Credits: “Top: San Fernando Aces at Manzanar War Relocation Center / Toyo Miyatake. Bottom: Baseball game, Manzanar Relocation Center, Calif. / photograph by Ansel Adams.

2024年08月24日(土)

Japanese American National Museum

100 North Central Avenue

Los Angeles, CA 90012

このイベントについて

EVENT UPDATE

This program has been rescheduled for December 7, 2024. Please check back on the website for more details.

Thank you and apologies for any inconvenience caused.

     

During the 1940s, baseball was the national pastime of the US, including in America’s World War II concentration camps. Japanese Americans created leagues in all ten camps and the games drew huge crowds, with spectators often standing and sitting on bare dirt under the blazing sun. Baseball was a way for Japanese Americans to find a sense of normalcy, uplift their spirits, and claim a connection to American culture. 

Today the Manzanar Baseball Project is rebuilding and bringing to life the diamond at Manzanar National Historic Site. Artist and Project Director Dan Kwong will be joined by Josh Morey, Bobby Umemoto, Chris Komai, and Prof. Susan Kamei in conversation about this compelling project, the rich history of Japanese Americans and baseball, and how they came to overlap in this often overlooked chapter of our nation’s history.

 

Not a current member? Join or renew now for free admission.

Image Credits: “Top: San Fernando Aces at Manzanar War Relocation Center / Toyo Miyatake. Bottom: Baseball game, Manzanar Relocation Center, Calif. / photograph by Ansel Adams.

日系アメリカ人の経験に対する理解と認識を深めていくため、当館にご支援をお願いいたします。

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