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The entrance to Manzanar.  Ansel Adams/Courtesy Photographic Traveling Exhibitions
The entrance to Manzanar.  (Ansel Adams/Courtesy Photographic Traveling Exhibitions)

Photos: 3 Views of Japanese-American World War II Internment

Photos: 3 Views of Japanese-American World War II Internment

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After Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the U.S. War Relocation Authority made a decision it would soon regret. It hired famed photographer Dorothea Lange to take pictures as 110,000 Japanese and Japanese-Americans were removed from their homes on the West Coast and interned at remote military-style camps throughout the interior.

The agency had hoped Lange's photos would depict the process as orderly and humane.

But the hundreds of photos that Lange turned over did the opposite. She considered the internment a grave injustice, and her photos depict it that way. They captured the confused and chaotic scenes of Japanese-Americans crowding onto buses and trains, the stressed and confused looks on their faces, their shuttered businesses, the threadbare barracks that would become their homes for months or years.

A newsstand in Oakland, California, in February, 1942.
A newsstand in Oakland, California, in February, 1942. (Dorothea Lange/Courtesy Library of Congress)

Instead of allowing Lange to publish her photos, the government seized them.

Now, some of them are on display at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles through this Sunday. They are part of an exhibit that tells the story of Japanese internment through the pictures of three photographers: Lange, the equally renowned landscape photographer Ansel Adams, whose photos from California's Manzanar internment camp anchor the exhibit, and Toyo Miyatake, a Japanese-American photographer who was interned at Manzanar but smuggled in a camera.

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The stories that photos tell depend so much on who's snapping the shutter, and Manzanar: The Wartime Photographs of Ansel Adams illustrates that in dramatic fashion. Each photographer offers a vastly different perspective on what Japanese internment was like, their photos reflecting not only differences in style, but in the relationship each photographer had to this shameful chapter of U.S. history.

Dorothea Lange

The photo below, showing a Japanese woman recently arrived at her living quarters, was among the hundreds of Lange's photos that were seized by government censors. On this original proof, the word "Impounded" is handwritten in the lower margin.

A Japanese woman in the door of her living quarters in San Bruno.
A Japanese woman in the door of her living quarters in San Bruno. (Dorothea Lange/Courtesy of the Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley)

This next photo is of a converted racetrack in San Bruno, where Japanese-American families were temporarily housed in horse stalls while they awaited transport to internment camps.

This center is a converted race track. Here are shown what were horse-stalls, remodeled into living quarters for families.
This center is a converted racetrack. Here are shown what were horse stalls, remodeled into living quarters for families. (Dorothea Lange/Courtesy The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley)

Lange's photo of the Manzanar internment camp during a duststorm highlights the camp's remote desert location.

Scene of barrack homes at this War Relocation Authority Center for evacuees of Japanese ancestry. A hot windstorm brings dust from the surrounding desert.
Scene of barrack homes at this War Relocation Authority Center for evacuees of Japanese ancestry. A hot windstorm brings dust from the surrounding desert. (Dorothea Lange/Courtesy The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley)

Ansel Adams

Joyce Yuki Nakamura
Joyce Yuki Nakamura (Ansel Adams/Courtesy Photographic Traveling Exhibitions)

Ansel Adams visited Manzanar to take photos in 1943 at the request of camp director Ralph Merritt, who was a personal friend.

"They don't look quite as dusty, and quite as forbidding as Dorothea Lange's photos," Robert Kirschner, the Skirball's director, told me as we walked through the exhibit recently.

Indeed, the place that looks barren and depressing in Lange's pictures manages to look beautiful in Adams'. You get little sense that it was even a detention center, in part because Adams, like other photographers, was not allowed to shoot the guard towers or barbed wire. This photo, though, was taken from a guard tower:

Manzanar from a guard tower.
Manzanar from a guard tower. (Ansel Adams/Courtesy Photographic Traveling Exhibitions)

There are scenes from a baseball game, kids walking to school, a gathering outside a chapel. Lots of smiles, too, and portraits of camp residents cropped so close you can see every blemish and stray hair. In Adams' vision, Manzanar comes off as a place where Japanese-Americans, dignified, resilient and optimistic in spite of their circumstances, built a temporary community in the desert.

Kirschner says that if Adams' photos appear to sugarcoat the indignities of life in an internment camp, it is because he did not see himself as a social activist the way Lange did. Still, Kirscher says, Adams was challenging internment in his own way, by depicting its victims as patriotic, law-abiding Americans.

Unlike Lange, Adams was given permission to publish his photos. Before the war ended, he did so in a book called "Born Free and Equal: The Story of Loyal Japanese-Americans," in which he warned about the dangers of letting wartime hysteria justify depriving U.S. citizens of their freedom.

Toyo Miyatake

Ansel Adams took this picture of fellow photographer Toyo Miyatake, who was interned at Manzanar.
Ansel Adams took this picture of fellow photographer Toyo Miyatake, who was interned at Manzanar. (Ansel Adams/Courtesy Photographic Traveling Exhibitions)

Before World War II, Toyo Miyatake had a photo studio in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo. When he learned he would be interned at Manzanar, he asked a carpenter to build him a wooden box with a hole carved out at one end to accommodate a lens. He turned this box into a makeshift camera that he snuck around the camp, as his grandson Alan Miyatake explains in the video below, which is featured in the exhibit.

Fearful of being discovered, Miyatake at first took pictures only at dusk or dawn, usually without people in them. Camp director Merritt eventually caught Miyatake, but instead of punishing him, allowed him to take pictures openly. Miyatake later became the camp's official photographer.

His photos, some of which are featured in the video above, convey an intimacy with camp life absent in the pictures that Adams and Lange took. He captured laughter at a picnic and men delivering vegetables to the mess hall (at 4:21 in the video).


His photos also had moments of silent protest. In one picture (5:03) three boys peer through the camp's barbed wire fence to the outside world. And in another, Miyatake's son, Archie, holds a pair of clippers against the fence, "to show," Kirschner said, "that at some point, the barbed wire has to come down."

Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/

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