by Mandolynn » Fri Oct 16, 2009 1:43 pm
Certainly I wasn't alive during WWII to speak from experience, but it wasn't Hitler that bombed Pearl Harbor.
Also, anti-Japanese sentiment, apparently esp. on the West Coast where there was a large concentration of Japanese immigrants, was alive and well long before WWII. I found a novel by Gene Stratton Porter among my grandmother's old books called "Her Father's Daughter." Talk about being shocked by bald-faced racism... I could hardly believe the sentiments expressed in that book. At first I thought well, this is an exaggerated stereotype that will be disproven in the end, but no. The main character continues to rail against the Japanese student in the book, who does eventually turns out to be everything that the MC implies and even worse. And then I thought, well, this book must have been written during WWII as propaganda. But no, again I was wrong; it was actually written in 1921.
It opened my eyes as to how there came to be the forced detention of Japanese-Americans during WWII. (So far as I know, no Germans were penned up on a wholesale basis.)
What I learned in my German class in college was that there was much more anti-German sentiment during WWI, when German newspapers and German church services disappeared virtually overnight in the face of the "Loyalty Pledge." In WWI the German people were seen as the aggressors but in WWII it was more Hitler that was the villain rather than the average German citizen.
Anyway, trust me, Mary's poems are quite mild in comparison to Miss Porter's novel. And I'm sure her novel was just a reflection of her times.
If we're shocked by their sentiments today, that's a good thing, isn't it? Maybe in some ways things are better than they used to be.
"I wouldn't go in there well-armed, tired of living, and directly behind Frank Buck."