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Subject: Modern Literature 2.0 Writing Applications (Genres and Their Characteristics) 2.4 Write historical investigation reports:California State Standards (U.S. History) Addressedb. Analyze several historical records of a single event, examining critical relationships between elements of the research topic.2.6 Deliver multimedia presentations: 11.7 Students analyze America's participation in World War II.5. Discuss the constitutional issues and impact of events on the U.S. homefront, including the internment of Japanese-Americans (e.g., Fred Korematsu v. United States of America) The treatment of U.S. nationals of Japanese heritage during WWII has been treated in several novels and movies. Students who complete these activities will have a better understanding of the forces which brought about the internment of Japanese-Americans and the hardships/heartaches suffered by all Americans touched by this policy. 1. Pre-testSnow Falling on Cedars (from USA Today, 1994) Snow Falling on Cedars is a film about life and death, love and betrayal, passion and pain, forgiveness and redemption. It is about the power of emotion to influence perception and memory. It is about justice and truth. But that is not why you should see it; You should see it for the story. For this film is so finely crafted, and the story unfolds so naturally, that it is easy to appreciate for the simple compelling drama of the narrative. You care about the characters, you care about how the trial turns out, and you ache to know the truth. The plot centers around a murder trial of a Japanese man charged in the death of a local fisherman, and on a white reporter covering the trial. It turns out the reporter had once been in love with a Japanese woman, now the accused man's wife. This romance was shattered as World War II broke out, and the young woman and her family were rounded up with other Japanese Americans, and interred in camps. The story that unfolds is part "Casablanca", part "Amistad", part "To Kill a Mockingbird", yet wholly original and true to itself. It is at once a tender love story, a lesson in history, a murder mystery, and more. The story of each of the main characters is told through flashbacks that reveal how each of them has suffered because of the war and how each has to overcome this suffering. Many of the most compelling images of the film occur in these flashbacks. Like real lasting memories, they are moments of deep emotional significance, and include many images which you will carry in your own mind long after you have left the theater. If you look for them you may also find some symbolic or allegorical images in the film (the boat's mast resembles a cross; the fish could also be seen as a Christian symbol of sacrifice), but these elements are not heavy handed or forced, they occur naturally as important elements of the story which is set in a small fishing village on the Northwestern coast of the US in the years surrounding World War II. Introductory Activitivies:1.Students will take a Pre-Test on their knowledge of the Japanese American internment during WWII.Enabling Activity(ies) 1. Students will search the internet for references and information on Japanese American internment during WWII, looking for information and facts they can use to complete their assignments.Culminating Activity 1. Students will present to other class members packets of the letters, journal entries, postcards and posters they created (or build a on display on one of the bulletin boards). 1. Evaluation Rubric for the PowerPoint presentation. Chart of pre-test, post-test, and culminating assessment data.
Enabling Activity
Text of Executive Order No.
9066:
Culminating Activity
www.lausd.k12.ca.us/Reseda HS or www.resedahighschool.com 18230 Kittridge Street, Reseda, CA 91335 818.342.6186 x 264 Diane L.
Johnson
Last Revised: 6/04/01 |
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