The Gate of Memory

Poems by Descendants of Nikkei Wartime Incarceration

Brandon Shimoda editor Brynn Saito editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Haymarket Books

Publishing:1st Apr '25

£24.99

This title is due to be published on 1st April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Gate of Memory cover

An anthology of poetry on Nikkei incarceration, written by descendants of the WWII prisons and camps

A tribute to the 150,000 people incarcerated by the United States and Canada during WWII, this anthology is the first of its kind. The poetry expresses a range of experiences and perspectives from the afterlife of this historical yet enduring injustice. With a foreword by acclaimed poet, activist, and concentration camp survivor, Mitsuye Yamada, and an introduction by the editors, poets Brynn Saito and Brandon Shimoda, The Gate of Memory explores intergenerational trauma as the contributors, all of whom are descendants of those who were incarcerated, sift through an intimate record of wartime incarceration.

Contributors to this anthology include poets of Japanese American, Japanese Canadian, Okinawan American, Okinawan Canadian, Japanese Hawaiian, Alaska Native, mixed race Nikkei, and Japanese descent. Their poems reimagine, reinhabit, and retell the story of incarceration while embodying its many legacies, through a diversity of modes and themes, creating a panoramic portrait of anti-Asian racism, assimilation, loyalty, resistance, and redemption. The anthology illuminates individual perspectives and reveals collective experience. It insists upon the imperative of poetry in the processes of solidarity and transgenerational healing.

With contributions from: Kiik Araki-Kawaguchi, Brittany Arita, Aaron Caycedo-Kimura, Brian Komei Dempster, Miya Folick, Sesshu Foster, Sharon Fujimoto-Johnson, Steve Fujimura, Laura K. Fukumoto, Cathlin Goulding, Rebecca A. Green, Richard Hamasaki, Sharon Hashimoto, Casey Hidekawa Lane/Levinski, Garrett Hongo, Jodi Hottel, Kurt Yokoyama Ikeda, Kevin Irie, Michael Ishii, Erica H. Isomura, Lauren Emiko Ito, Susan Kiyo Ito, Miya Iwataki, Dr. Claire Kageyama-Ramakrishnan, W. Todd Kaneko, Traci Kato-Kiriyama, Amanda Mei Kim, Christine Kitano, Aisuke Kondo, Garrett Kurai, Keiko Lane, Katherine Terumi Laubscher, Alison Lubar, Mia Ayumi Malhotra, Angela Marian May, Ali Meyers-Ohki, Emily Mitamura, Hikari Leilani Miya, Starr Sumie Miyata, James Fujinami Moore, Paulette "Tkl Un Yeik" Moreno, David Mura, Heather Nagami, Noriko Nakada, Greer Nakadegawa-Lee, Carolyn Nakagawa, Yukiko Nakagura (translator), Ryan Hitoshi Nakano, Tamiko Nimura, Mona Oikawa, Troy Osaki, Michael Prior, Brynn Saito, Brandon Shimoda, Patrick Shiroishi, Leanne Toshiko Simpson, Dana Swensen, Kenneth Tanemura, Micah Tasaka, George Uba, Amy Uyematsu, Terry Watada, Anne Watanabe, Syd Westley, Sho Yamagushiku, Doug Yamamoto, Traise Yamamoto. Cover art by Rob Sato.

“This pilgrimage of poems, blessed by elder poets Mitsuye Yamada and Lawson Inada, is here gifted at The Gate of Memory. Our parents, who once named that memory ambiguously “camp,” have passed beyond that gate. May these words render solace, rise as haunting stars to light our way.”
—Karen Tei Yamashita

“Out of the wreckage of the camps, these poets have created lasting objects of beauty, sorrow and rage. The Gate of Memory is a landmark anthology to be read and reread.”
—Julie Otsuka

“A vital ancestral fire tended by brilliant poets, The Gate of Memory offers us so many profound and devastating glimpses into the precise contours of incarceration and its aftermath. I was struck by the myriad inflections of silence, care and resistance that descendants share with such discernment and fortitude. Through attentive witness and tenacious solidarity, this book actively metabolizes trauma, transforming some of the pain and injustice into collective strength. This offering of intergenerational love stunned me with its depth and breadth.
—Rita Wong

“The Gate of Memory makes the familiar strange—and incarceration should be strange, even unimaginable. Perhaps poetry inoculates us against normalization. My family spoke of internment, and I thought this was particular to a small and dwindling we. To move through The Gate of Memory, however, is to imagine a we that is still gathering strength, the we who closed Rikers, made San Quentin a museum, and awoke from the fascist fever dream of mass deportation and incarceration."
—Naomi Murakawa, author, The First Civil Right: How Liberals Built Prison America

ISBN: 9798888903711

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

288 pages