My thesis centers on the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II.
I argue that racism and racial innocence best explain the systemic failures of two interrelated phenomena respectively: (1) the failure to equally recognize and apply the same American principles of constitutional liberty to Asian immigrants and Asian Americans as evident from the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, and (2) the failure to educate Americans on historical discrimination, as evident from the consequent lack of educational literature concerning the imprisonment of Japanese Americans.
I present racism and racial innocence as the primary variables that enabled failure among multiple institutions. Racial innocence is a concept in Critical Race Theory (CRT) originally coined to describe the predominant white American response to long-lasting effects of slavery— particularly highlighting the propensity toward forgetfulness, erasure, and denial of past accounts of racial discrimination. Racial innocence is perpetuated by focusing largely on racial intent with a false distinction between individuals with racist intent and the racially innocent institutions in which they reside. Critical race theorists have traditionally attributed “innocence” to the white majority population who retrospectively confine racism to its original historical contexts, deem historical racism as largely irrelevant to the present, and disregard the notion that past racism still has consequences today.
I first analyze how the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans was not a justifiable aberration of civil rights violations, but rather the inevitable climax of consistent exclusionary immigration policy. Establishing this pattern of anti-Japanese policy is necessary to demonstrate the current role of racial innocence, which rationalizes instances of racial injustice as mere historical aberrations. This examination of Asian immigration provides the context to the very patterns of racism that enabled the incarceration and the racial innocent culture that currently pervades the contemporary American education system. Subsequently, I examine some of the current history textbooks used to educate America’s youth in order to stress the influence of racial innocence on American education.