• Open Daily: 10am - 10pm
    Alley-side Pickup: 10am - 7pm

    3038 Hennepin Ave Minneapolis, MN
    612-822-4611

Open Daily: 10am - 10pm | Alley-side Pickup: 10am - 7pm
3038 Hennepin Ave Minneapolis, MN
612-822-4611
Not Yo' Butterfly: My Long Song of Relocation, Race, Love, and Revolution Volume 60

Not Yo' Butterfly: My Long Song of Relocation, Race, Love, and Revolution Volume 60

Paperback

Series: American Crossroads

Biographies GeneralAmerican Art - Asian-AmericanAsian American Studies

ISBN10: 0520380657
ISBN13: 9780520380653
Publisher: Univ Of California Pr
Published: Jun 15 2021
Pages: 344
Weight: 0.95
Height: 0.90 Width: 6.00 Depth: 8.90
Language: English
A mold-breaking memoir of Asian American identity, political activism, community, and purpose.

Not Yo' Butterfly is the intimate and unflinching life story of Nobuko Miyamoto--artist, activist, and mother. Beginning with the harrowing early years of her life as a Japanese American child navigating a fearful west coast during World War II, Miyamoto leads readers into the landscapes that defined the experiences of twentieth-century America and also foregrounds the struggles of people of color who reclaimed their histories, identities, and power through activism and art.

Miyamoto vividly describes her early life in the racialized atmosphere of Hollywood musicals and then her turn toward activism as an Asian American troubadour with the release of A Grain of Sand--considered to be the first Asian American folk album. Her narrative intersects with the stories of Yuri Kochiyama and Grace Lee Boggs, influential in both Asian and Black liberation movements. She tells how her experience of motherhood with an Afro-Asian son, as well as a marriage that intertwined Black and Japanese families and communities, placed her at the nexus of the 1992 Rodney King riots--and how she used art to create interracial solidarity and conciliation.

Through it all, Miyamoto has embraced her identity as an Asian American woman to create an antiracist body of work and a blueprint for empathy and praxis through community art. Her sometimes barbed, often provocative, and always steadfast story is now told.

1 different editions

Also available

Also in

Biographies General