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Articles
Tien Rong by Jeffrey Barlow
Hawaii and API History by Bill Ong Hing
Chai, Alice Yun, "Women’s History in Public: ‘Picture Brides’ of Hawaii," Women’s Studies Quarterly 1 & 2 (1988):51-63. Examines the working lives of first Korean and Japanese immigrant women in Hawai‘i.
Recent immigration from the Philippines & Filipino, Communities in the US,by Allen, James P. Geographical Review 76 (1977):195-208.
Aquino, Belinda A. "Filipino women workers in Hawaii," Filipinas 1,1 (1980):81-95.
Liu, John Mei., "Cultivating Cane: Asian Labor and the Hawaiian Sugar Plantation System within the Capitalist World Economy, 1835-1920," Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles, 1985. Asian immigrant labor struggles on Hawaiian sugar plantations.
Char, Tin-yuke and Wai Jane Char, "The First Chinese Contract Laborers in Hawaii, 1852," Hawaiian Journal of History 9 (1975). Examination of working lives of first Chinese immigrants in Hawai‘i.
SA-EE-GU: A Defining Moment for Korean American Diaspora
By K. W. Lee
Vietnamese Americans: Diaspora & Dimensions, a special 280-page issue of
AMERASIA JOURNAL (29:1), edited by Professor Linda Vo.
Blue Dreams: Korean Americans and the Los Angeles Riotsby Nancy Abelmann, JohnLie
Videotapes
The Great Hawaii Dock Strike, Dir. Joy Chong-Stannard. Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1999.
The 171 day strike challenged the colonial wage pattern whereby Hawai'i workers received significantly lower pay than their West Coast counterparts. Interviews with Ah Quon McElrath, Bud Smyser, Henry Walker, Jr., Mamoru Yamasaki, Senator Inouye and many of the striking longshoremen, including Joe Kahapea, Joe Kahee, Herman Kila, Levi Kealoha.
Getting Somewheres. Dir. Joy Chong. Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1998.
Dramatization of the oral histories of Hawai'i working women, produced on location at Hawaii's Plantation Village in Waipahu.
1946: The Great Hawaii Sugar Strike. Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1996.
About twenty six thousand sugar workers and their families, 76 thousand people in all, began a 79-day strike on September 1, 1946 that completely shut down 33 of Hawai'i's 34 plantations. Produced 50 years after this landmark strike this program shows how it forever changed the islands economically, politically, and socially ushering in a new era of participatory democracy both on the plantations and throughout Hawai'i's political and social institutions. The show features an array of never-before-seen photos, artifacts and interviews with surviving strikers, their relatives and friends from all the islands who organized the food-kitchens and support committees.
Brothers Under the Skin. Based on The Hilo Massacre: Hawaii's Bloody Monday August 1st, 1938 by Puette. Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1989.
Dramatization of Hilo Longshoreman Harry Kamoku's struggle to organize a dockworkers union, including a recreation of the shooting on August 1st.
Hole Hole Bushi: Songs of the Canefield.Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1984.
Hole hole is Hawaiian for the dead leaf of sugar cane, and bushi is the Japanese word for song. Dr. Franklin Odo, of the University of Hawai'i's Ethnic Studies Program, and Honolulu music teacher Harry Urata go on location to interview oldtimers who share their songs and histories.
Introduction to the History of Hawaiian Labor, Parts 1, 2, & 3. Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1974.
Part one explores the rapid changes in Hawaiian economy from the time of European contact up to 1909. Part two, from 1909 to the start of World War II, examines the years of inflation, low wages and organized management opposition to unionization. Part three, from World War II – 1974, looks at the growing influences of organized working people as evidenced through worker-related legislation.
Memory Lane. Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1987.
Two segments: the first features first railroad workers' recollections of the early days of locomotives used at Kaua'i sugar plantations, the second features interviews by Barabara Kawakami of a carpenter, a seamstress and four Japanese women who were former sugar workers in Waipahu recalling the 1920 Sugar Strike.
Picture Brides.Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1986.
Japanese, Korean and Okinawan plantation workers in Hawai'i arranged marriages with women back in their homelands whom they had never met. This video, with University of Hawai'i's Alice Chai and Barbara Kawakami, explored the courage, wisdom and humor with which the women faced their arranged marriages and the way they established new lives in Hawai'i.
Plantation Days, Parts 1 & 2.Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1984.
Three noted experts on Hawai'i's history discuss the past: Ron Takaki, author of Pau Hana, Plantation Life and Labor in Hawai'i; Ed Beechert, University of Hawai'i History professor; and Ethnic Studies expert Franklin Odo. They don't always agree in this sometimes heated debate.
Working People of Lana’i. Rice & Roses: The University of Hawaii Center for Labor Education & Research, 1983.
The island of Lana’i is almost entirely owned by the Dole Pineapple Company, and the majority of the islanders work in the pineapple fields. Today they are some of the most well-paid laborers in the world, but it was not always so. Through interviews, many older workers describe how the island came together to demand greater pay and social dignity.