INDEX

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Adaptability, Japanese disposition of, 20
Æsthetic temperament of Japanese, 13
Age distribution of Japanese in California, 112
Agreement, Root-Takahira, 34
Agriculture, Japanese, in California, 120-147;
causes of Japanese progress in, 123-126
Ainu, 14
American-born Japanese, 174-177
American disposition, 9
Americanization, criterion of, 151-154
Ancestors, Japanese, 16
Anti-Alien Land Laws, 138-142;
effect of, 145;
Appendixes C, D
Anti-Japanese Agitation, causes of, 75-89
Asiatic policy, Japan’s, 33-45
Assimilation, 137; 148-177;
and nationalism, 148-159;
meaning of, 151-154;
biological, 155-162;
of Japanese immigrants, 168-174
Australia, Japanese emigration to, 64-67
Birth-rate of Japanese in California, 109-119
Boas, Professor, quoted, 163
Bolsheviki, 38
Buddhism, 25
Bushido, 15, 21
California, causes of Anti-Japanese agitation in, 75;
causes of Japanese influx to, 50-63;
Christianity among Japanese in, 169-170;
competition in, 133-135;
congestion of Japanese in, 87-89;
cultural assimilation of Japanese in, 166-168;
genesis of hostility towards Japanese in, 71;
population of, 93;
problem, 7
Canada, Japanese emigration to, 67-69
Capitalism, 29
Castle, Professor, quoted, 159
Chiba, T., quoted, 129
China, Japan’s coÖperation with, 42-45
Chinese, 23, 95
Chivalry, proletarian, 21
Christianity, 28
Colonization, Japanese policy of, 18
Confucianism, 25, 27
Congressional sub-Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, 176
Constitution, Japanese, 11
Democracy, industrial, 31
Democratic institutions, Japanese training in, 172
Den Do Dan, 169-170
Despotism, Japanese, 22
Dewey, Professor John, 29
Dispersal of Japanese in California, 189
Disposition, Japanese, 20
Dual nationality, 191
East and West, 4, 195-196

Economic status of Japanese in California, 171
Education, system of, 31
Emotional nature, of Japanese, 9
English, Japanese ability to command, 170
Eta, 18
Eurasiatic relationship, 6
Expatriation Law of Japan, Appendix K
Farmers, Japanese, in California, 132-138
Fishberg, Dr., quoted, 164
“Gentlemen’s Agreement,” 100-106
German, influence on Japan, 30;
idealism, 32
Gikyoshin, 21
Group consciousness of Japanese, 16
Gulick, Dr. Sydney L., quoted, 157
Hara kiri, 12
Hearn, Lafcadio, 44
Hedonism, Japanese, 15
Hideyoshi, 10
History of Japanese, 10, 20
Humanism, 32
Immigration to
Australia, 64-67
Canada, 67-69
South America, 69
United States, 69-75
Industrial democracy, 31
Intelligence of Japanese in California, 170
Intermarriage, 155-162
Japan, topographical conditions of, 13;
Nature of, 14
Japan’s, Asiatic Policy, 33;
land area, 52;
agriculture, 52-55;
industry, 57-62;
population, 55-57;
social conditions, 62-63
Japanese, ability to speak English, 170;
age distribution of, in California, 112;
agriculture in California, 120-147;
ancestors, 16;
assimilability of, 148-177;
birth rate in California, 109-119;
civilization of, 14;
Constitution, 11;
death rate of, in California, 117;
descendants in California, 164-166, 174-177;
economic status of, in California, 171;
farm labor, 126-131;
farmers in California, 132-138;
immigration to America, 97-107;
Land Laws, 142-145;
morality of, in California, 168-169;
nationality, 85-86;
number of, in California, 91;
philosophy, 24;
sex distribution of, in California, 112;
social system, 30;
susceptibility of, 12;
training in civics, 172
Jesuit Fathers, 10
Jones and East, quoted, 159
Kikotsu, 21
Kipling, quoted, 4
Kojiki, 16
Korea, amalgamation of, 34;
local self-government in, 36;
situation in, 35-37
Koreans, 18
Kusama, Shiko, note, 170
Labor, 30
Land, amount held by Japanese in California, 135-137
Land Laws, Anti-Alien, 138-142;
Appendixes C and D
League of Nations, 19
Lippman, Walter, note, 86
Manchuria, 37
Mankind, 6
Marriage, Japanese, 11
Millis, Professor H. A., quoted, 157
Morality of Japanese in California, 168-169
Morris, Roland, 186
Myth, 17

Nationalism, 148
Native-born Japanese, 174
Nevada, 23
Newlands, U. S. Senator, 23
Nihongi, 16
NitobÉ, Dr., 22
Number of Japanese in California, 91
Oakesmith, John, quoted, 176
Occidental learning, 26
Occidentalism, ultra, 19
Otokodate, 21
Pacific Coast, 193-194
Passports, 103
Patriotism of Japanese, 17
Perry, Commodore, 3
Philosophy, Japanese, 24
Picture brides, 113
Political rights of Japanese, 31
Politics as a cause of agitation, 80-82
Population of Japanese in California, 90-97
Positivism, English, 28
Pragmatism, 29, 32
Pride of Japanese, 11, 19
Propaganda, 83
Race war, 7
Racial difference, 83-85
Radicals, Japanese, 20
Relationship, American Japanese, 7
Roosevelt, Theodore, 33
Root-Takahira Agreement, 34
Russo-Japanese war, 18
Sakura, Sogoro, 22
Samurai, 12, 15
San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, 187
Santayana, 29
Science, lack of, in Japan, 15
Sex distribution of Japanese in California, 113
Shantung, 39
Shibusawa, Viscount, 186
Smuggling of Japanese to United States, 107-109
Social, force, 23;
milieu as affecting man, 165;
reorganization, 29
South America, Japanese emigration to, 69
State Board of Control of California, 96
Stephens, Governor, quoted, 5, 23, 122
Suicide in Japan, 12
Thought, Japanese, 29
Tokugawa rÉgime, 22
Traits, Japanese, 9
Treaty, American-Japanese, 187, Appendix B
United States, the, Japanese immigration to, 69-74
Unity, national, 17
Utilitarians, 29
Vanderlip, Frank, 187
Wang Yang Ming, 26
White and yellow races, 5
Wilson, Woodrow, quoted, 154
Women, status of Japanese, 31
Yamato race, 14
“Yellow peril,” 82
Young Japan, 14


Footnotes:

[1] The System of Samurai Ethics and Obligations of Honor.

[2] See “The New Chino-Japanese Treaties and Their Import,” by T. Iyenaga, in The American Review of Reviews, September, 1915.

[3] According to the result of the census taken on October 1, 1920, the Japanese population of South Manchuria stands at 154,998 souls. Of this total, those living at Dairen number 63,745; Fushun, 12,659; Mukden, 12,268; Port Arthur, 9379; Antung, 7057, and Anshan, 6678, while those resident in the jurisdiction of Kwantung Province number 74,893.

[4] One dollar U. S. currency is approximately two yen.

[5] For a complete tabulation of Japanese immigration see Appendix F.

[6] Tokyo Emigration Co., Toyo Emigration Co., were the most conspicuous.

[7] Report of the Royal Commission appointed to inquire into the methods by which Oriental laborers were induced to come to Canada in 1909.

[8] Report as cited, p. 54.

[9] Those who voted in the negative for the initiative bill were 222,086 against 668,483 in the affirmative.

[10] Stakes of Diplomacy, by Walter Lippman, p. 40.

[11] Report published on October 5, 1920, by the Bureau of Commercial Affairs, Foreign Office, Tokyo, Japan.

[12] California and the Oriental, State Board of Control of California, 1920, p. 30.

[13] California and the Oriental, p. 27.

[14] For detailed comparison of geographical distribution of Chinese and Japanese see Appendix I.

[15] See Appendix G.

[16] California and the Oriental, p. 31.

[17] Total number of Japanese born in California so far is approximately 30,000, of which about 5000 have either died or live in Japan.

[18] Annual Report of Commissioner-General of Immigration.

[19] Immigration Laws—Rules of November 15, 1911, published by U. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Immigration, March 10, 1913.

[20] Japan Year Book, 1920, p. 34.

[21] Pacific Review, vol. i., No. 3, p. 363; “The Japanese in California,” by David S. Jordan.

[22] Bulletin 127, 1914, p. 8.

[23] The following data are reported by the Bureau of Census, Washington, in preliminary publication of 1920 census:

The Japanese population by sex in 1920 is male 44,364, female 25,832; for 1910, male 35,116, female 6,240; and for 1900, male 9,598, female 553. The per cent. distribution by sex of the Japanese in 1920 is male 63.2 per cent., female 36.8 per cent.; for 1910 male 84.9 per cent., female 15.1 per cent.; and for 1900, male 94.6 per cent., female 5.4 per cent.

[24] Gulick, S. L., Japan and the Gentlemen’s Agreement, 1920, p. 7.

[25] World Almanac 1921, p. 476-9.

[26] World Almanac 1920, p. 487.

[27] The birth rate of immigration population in Massachusetts was 49.1 in 1910.

[28] Senate Document, vol. lxv., 61st Congress.

[29] Senate Document, vol. lxv., 61st Congress.

[30] Of the forty-one answers to the questionnaires sent to the County Farm Commissioners in California by the Board of Control asking them to give pertinent facts concerning the methods used by these races (Orientals) in securing land leases, twenty-five stated: “The Japanese pay more rent in cash or shares”; ten said: “Japanese pay ordinary rent” or “use ordinary means in obtaining lease.” California and the Oriental, pp. 56-61.

[31] The Japanese Problem in the United States, pp. 148-49.

[32] California and the Oriental, pp. 56-61.

[33] Ibid., p. 221.

[34] California and the Oriental, p. 58.

[35] Immigration Commission Reports, vol. xxiii., chap. iv.

[36] Japanese-American Year Book, 1918, p. 10.

[37] The Japanese Problem in the United States, p. 123.

[38] For detailed comparison of crops raised by white and Japanese farmers see Appendix E.

[39] Figures taken from California and the Oriental, p. 47.

[40] See Appendix B.

[41] For full texts of land laws 1913 and 1920 see Appendixes C and D.

[42] California and the Oriental, p. 104.

[43] Mr. Newman in the hearings held at Sacramento, California, in 1913.

[44] Millis’ The Japanese Problem in the United States, p. 275.

[45] Gulick, S. L., The American Japanese Problem, p. 153.

[46] Jones and East, Inbreeding and Outbreeding—Their Genetic and Sociological Significance, p. 255.

[47] W. E. Castle, Genetics and Eugenics, pp. 233-38.

[48] California and the Oriental, p. 15.

[49] “Changes in Bodily Form of Descendants of Immigrants.” Senate Document No. 208, pp. 7-54.

[50] The Jews: A Study of Race and Environment.

[51] See Appendix A.

[52] The Forum, January, 1921, p. 3.

[53] For this as well as other information the authors are indebted to Mr. S. Kusama, who furnished us with the materials which were carefully prepared by him from first-hand research in California.

[54] Bureau of Census Bulletin 127, p. 12.

[55] Race and Nationality, Frederick A. Stokes Co., New York, 1919.

[56] See example of testimony in Appendix L.

See also Appendix M in which the subject of comparative standing of intelligence and behaviour of native-born Japanese children and American children is discussed by several principals of elementary schools in Southern California.

[57] For text of this law see Appendix K.





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