Tokyo Rose / an American Patriot
A Dual Biography- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2009
Summary
Tokyo Rose / An American Patriot explores the parallel lives of World War II legend Tokyo Rose and a Japanese American woman named Iva Toguri. Trapped in Tokyo during the war and forced to broadcast on Japanese radio, Toguri nonetheless refused to renounce her U.S. citizenship and surreptitiously aided Allied POWs. Despite these patriotic actions, she foolishly identified herself to the press after the war as Tokyo Rose. An examination of U.S.-monitored English language radio transcripts from Japan between December, 1941 and April, 1942 shows only one innocuous broadcast by a female. Yet in April, 1942 a news correspondent with the U.S. Navy reported that sailors in the Pacific theater routinely listened to Tokyo Rose's propaganda. This book assembles for the first time a collection of images from American pre-war popular culture that provided impetus for the legend. It analyzes the wartime situation of servicemen, which caused their imaginations to create the mythical femme fatale even though no Japanese announcer ever used the name Tokyo Rose. Using interviews conducted over decades, this dual biography also explores Toguri's character and decisions by placing her story and conviction for treason in the context of U.S. and Japanese racial views, Imperial Japan, and Cold War politics. New research findings prompt a different perspective on her sensational trial, the most expensive in U.S. history up to that time. Misguided strategy by Toguri's defense attorney and her deceptive testimony about a key event led to the jury's verdict as surely as the perjury suborned by prosecutors.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2009
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-8108-6777-2
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-8108-7466-4
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 523
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Table of Contents No access
- Editor's Foreword No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- Introduction No access
- 1: Baseball Paths and Two-Lane Blacktops: Youth at Full Speed (1916-1940) No access Pages 1 - 26
- 2: A Fateful Letter in Failing Light (1940-1941) No access Pages 27 - 40
- 3: Tokyo Rose: Origins of the Legend (Prewar) No access Pages 41 - 66
- 4: Collision with Japan: Before Pearl Harbor (1941) No access Pages 67 - 82
- 5: At War and on Her Own (1942) No access Pages 83 - 106
- 6: The Toguris Back Home: Internment (1942-1945) No access Pages 107 - 132
- 7: Barely Surviving: A Typist at Radio Tokyo (1943) No access Pages 133 - 154
- 8: A New Career in Broadcasting: Zero Hour (1943-1944) No access Pages 155 - 180
- 9: Tokyo Rose: The Legend of the Radio Siren (Wartime) No access Pages 181 - 214
- 10: Black Marketeer: The Destruction of Imperial Japan (1944) No access Pages 215 - 240
- 11: War's End (1945) No access Pages 241 - 254
- 12: The Scoop (1945) No access Pages 255 - 274
- 13: CIC and FBI Investigations: Exoneration and Release (1946-1947) No access Pages 275 - 296
- 14: Into the Cold War: A Furor Grows (1947-1948) No access Pages 297 - 320
- 15: The Perjurors: The FBI at Work (1948-1949) No access Pages 321 - 356
- 16: The Prosecution: United States v. Tokyo Rose (1949) No access Pages 357 - 390
- 17: The Defense: Iva Toguri v. Tokyo Rose (1949) No access Pages 391 - 436
- 18: The Verdict: United States v. Iva Toguri (1949) No access Pages 437 - 446
- 19: Alderson Federal Reformatory: Failed Appeals (1950-1959) No access Pages 447 - 478
- 20:The Quest for a Pardon (1960-2006) No access Pages 479 - 504
- Epilogue No access Pages 505 - 508
- Appendix: The Indictment No access Pages 509 - 510
- Bibliography No access Pages 511 - 514
- Index No access Pages 515 - 520
- About the Author No access Pages 521 - 523





