To address the social and musical experiences of Japanese Americans in the first half of the twentieth century—to consider their passage across oceans, archipelagoes, urban centers, and rural outposts—is to trace a history of continuous and multifaceted mobility. At the same time, however, to do so is also to confront a certain terminological paradox. That is, if one aims to account for the centrality of movement and motion to Japanese American musical practice—or to endeavor in any way to deploy mobility as a thematic or interpretive keyword—one must acknowledge the equal importance of immobility as well. Paradoxically, one must grant that the histories of Japanese American musical practice are equally, and often simultaneously, ones of migration as well as incarceration, of place-making and displacement, of mobility and immobility at once. This is indeed the case for the vast number of individual and shared experiences that have come to populate the...

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