"A fascinating and readable account of the winding path that culminated in the forced removal and mass incarceration of Japanese-Americans during the Second World War. the strength of the book is its panoramic scope, which situations President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Executive Order 90066 within a larger trajectory of racialization, largely through legal systems, of Asian immigrants and their ancestors."—Choice
“Lawrence Goldstone’s book, both lively and well-documented, shows us that the shocking mass imprisonment of Japanese Americans during World War II did not come out of thin air; it was based on a century of growing anti-Asian racism. He also celebrates people we remember too seldom: the heroic figures who fought to undo this great crime.”—Adam Hochschild, author of American Midnight: The Great War, a Violent Peace, and Democracy’s Forgotten Crisis
“Not White Enough is hugely informative. Lawrence Goldstone has shone a bright light on the deep roots of racism, anti-Asian legislation, and the men who stoked the flames of hatred. He takes a deep dive into revealing the long history of anti-Asian racism that led to the World War II incarceration of over 120,000 persons of Japanese ancestry and calls out the California leaders, labor unions, and organizations that worked hard to get rid of the economic threat posed by Japanese Americans on the West Coast. As the daughter of two US citizens who were imprisoned based only on their ancestry, this history helps to fill a very large gap in understanding why Japanese Americans were targeted and imprisoned.”—Kay Ochi, president, Japanese American Historical Society of San Diego, and co-chair, Nikkei for Civil Rights & Redress/Los Angeles
“Written with flair and a sense of drama, Not White Enough is a very good, attention-grabbing read. Goldstone locates anti-Japanese sentiment in the United States during the first half of the twentieth century within the broader context of Asian exclusion and weaves a cautionary tale using recent events as reminders that issues of racial animus in immigration are not simply relics of the past. Ranging from local politics to international events, from the Boodle Boys to baseball diplomacy, from alien land laws to secret information-gathering on the loyalty of West Coast Nisei and Issei, and from Earl Warren’s relationship with the Sons of the Golden West to key Supreme Court cases such as Korematsu, Not White Enough offers something for every reader.”—Carol Nackenoff is the Richter Professor Emerita of Political Science at Swarthmore College and coauthor of American by Birth: Wong Kim Ark and the Battle for Citizenship
“While Korematsu v. United States remains a shameful monument of American racism in constitutional law, this book tells the story of how the anti-Japanese animus that produced internment during World War II developed from nearly a century of anti-Asian mobilization. This exclusionary movement, directed first at Chinese immigrants but ultimately extending to US citizens of Asian ancestry, was carried out by white residents in the West, government officials, and federal court judges, including members of the Supreme Court. Alongside this story, the book provides a compelling narrative of how Japanese immigrants persisted, finding inspiration in American ideals of justice, equality, and patriotism. A timely and critical historical contribution!”—Julie Novkov, professor of political science and women's, gender, and sexuality studies, University at Albany, SUNY
“Not White Enough is an excellent analysis of the raw, unalloyed history of racial discrimination of Japanese and other Asian immigrants. It is also a vivid narrative of the paradox of democracy: if America is a democracy, then freedom of speech is a sacrosanct principle. When, as Goldstone examines so acutely, immigration policy is an issue, free speech must allow full and free civil discourse leading to passage of needed legislation. Democracy is threatened, ironically, by its primary value: freedom of speech and the use of social media to convey speech. Can defenders of the value of truth in policy discussions counter fake news persons? Goldstone’s book shows that this battle still rages on and there is no pacific settlement of the dilemma.”—Howard Ball, professor emeritus of political science, University of Vermont, and author of several books, including Justice in Mississippi: The Murder Trial of Edgar Ray Killen; Murder in Mississippi: United States v. Price and the Struggle for Civil Rights; and The Bakke Case: Race, Education, and Affirmative Action