Sunday, February 17, 2019
Japanese-Americans and the Constitution :: Japanese-Americans concentration camps WWII
Japanese-Americans and the Constitution A Review of the Smithsonians A More Perfect Union Website Brief Description and Museums PurposeA More Perfect Union ... is organized as a chronology of events grab around one basic theme the confinement of Japanese-Americans to concentration camps during WWII. I believe the message being conveyed to the public is one of a study apology to these Japanese-Americans and their descendants for the great injustices forced upon them. In addition, the museum attempts to warn the boilers suit public that since such a violation of the constitution has proven likely in the past, we cannot blindly rely on the fabric of our constitution to celebrate such injustices from occurring again. We must proceed with caution in matters of civil liberties and trifle towards achieving a more perfect union.OrganizationAs indicated above, the sym formise is theme-based, centered around a historical period of time. Because of this, there is a large proportion of t ext, revealing background history, in relation to the veritable artifacts. In my second, more thorough run- by, I certainly found myself translation more than looking at things. In fact, it seems as though the face only tells the true chronological history to those patient enough to read all of the text. A less thorough visit to the exhibit get out undoubtedly result in a skewed view of the past. I will address this issue later in the Critical sound judgement section.The exhibit has an obvious beginning (with a mural of the Constitution and an accounting entry video) and then leads the visitor finished a somewhat delineated path towards the exit. There is some freedom to back-track, skip around, and even to go through the entire exhibit backwards if you wish. However, during my time in the exhibit, I observed nearly everyone following the predescribed path.Along this delineated path, the exhibit seems to be tough down into five main subthemes the Japanese migration to the U .S., the incarceration process, life privileged the detention camps, U.S. military involvement by the Japanese-Americans, and repairing the Constitution. By traveling through the exhibit in this order, the visitor gets a feel for the basic chronology of the events and by chance how one event led into the other.Critical AssessmentEffectiveness and Biases I believe the exhibition team did an excellent job of conveying their think message although I am not in total stipulation with it. Again, this message is to apologize for the Americans who acted out of hysteria in imprisoning a relative majority of fellow citizens who were completely innocent.
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