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There are many books for children that touch on the themes and events
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Wartime Memories
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STUDY GUIDE: When The Emperor Was Divine by Julie Otsuka
Developed by Library Services, Santa Clara County Offices of Education
Julie Otsuka was born in Palo Alto and studied art at Yale University. After
pursuing a career as a painter, she turned to fiction at age 30. One of her
short stories was included in Scribner's Best of the Fiction Workshops 1998,
edited by Carol Shields. When The Emperor Was Divine is her first
novel. She lives in New York.
Author's website:
www.randomhouse.com/boldtype/0902/otsuka/

Julia Otsuka's quietly disturbing novel opens with a woman reading a sign in
a post office window. It is Berkeley, California, the spring of 1942. Pearl
Harbor has been attacked, the war is on, and though the precise message on the
sign is not revealed, its impact on the woman who reads it is immediate and
profound. It is, in many ways she cannot yet foresee, a sign of things to come.
She readies herself and her two young children for a journey that will take them
to the high desert plains of Utah and into a world that will shatter their
illusions forever. They travel by train and gradually the reader discovers that
all on board are Japanese American, that the shades must be pulled down at night
so as not to invite rock-throwing, and that their destination is an internment
camp where they will be imprisoned "for their own safety" until the war is over.
With stark clarity and an unflinching gaze, Otsuka explores the inner lives of
her main characters – the mother, daughter, and son
– as they struggle to understand their fate and
long for the father whom they have not seen since he was whisked away, in
slippers and handcuffs, on the evening of Pearl Harbor.
Moving between dreams, memories, and sharply emblematic moments, When the
Emperor Was Divine reveals the dark underside of a period in American
history that, until now, has been left largely unexplored in American fiction.

Packing List
Ask students to imagine that the government is removing them from
their homes for an indeterminate length of time allowing each person to take
along only one suitcase. They are not told what living conditions will be like
where they are going. Have them make lists showing which of their possessions
they would pack. Encourage them to share how they would feel in such a
situation. Explain that When The Emperor Was Divine is a novel
about an American family in this situation during World War II.
Tapping Prior Knowledge: World War II
Invite students to share what they know about relations between the United
States and Japan during World War II. Ask if they know how these relations
affected the lives of Japanese Americans during the war. Have students record
their responses and elaborate or revise them as they read When The Emperor
Was Divine.
Justice and Rights
Lead a class discussion focusing on justice and rights. You might pose
questions such as the following:
- Which rights should be protected by law?
- Under what conditions, if any, might it be justifiable to violate a
citizen’s legal rights?
- Can you give an example(s) of recent legal decisions that might be
considered unjust and of current situations in which government is
mistreating people?
- What should people do if they feel their rights are being violated? What
should they do if they feel others’ rights are being violated?

- When The Emperor Was Divine gives readers an intimate view of the
fate of Japanese Americans during World War II. In what ways does the novel
deepen our existing knowledge of this historical period? What does it give
readers that a straightforward historical investigation cannot?
- Why does Otsuka choose to reveal the family's reason for moving
– and the father's arrest – so indirectly and so
gradually? What is the effect when the reason becomes apparent?
- Otsuka skillfully places subtle but significant details in her narrative.
When the mother goes to Lundy's hardware store, she notices a "dark stain" on
the register "that would not go away" [p. 5]. The dog she has to kill is
called "White Dog" [see pp. 9-12]. Her daughter's favorite song on the radio
is "Don't Fence Me In." How do these details, and others like them, point to
larger meanings in the novel?
- Why does Otsuka refer to her characters as "the woman," "the girl," "the
boy," and "the father," rather than giving them names? How does this lack of
specific identities affect the reader's relationship to the characters?
- When they arrive at the camp in the Utah desert –
"a city of tar-paper barracks behind a barbed-wire fence on a dusty
alkaline plain" – the boy thinks he sees his
father everywhere: "wherever the boy looked he saw him: Daddy, Papa, Father,
Oto-san" [p. 49]. Why is the father's absence such a powerful presence in the
novel? How do the mother and daughter think of him? How would their story have
been different had the family remained together?
- When the boy wonders why he's in the camp, he worries that "he'd done
something horribly, terribly wrong. . . . It could be anything. Something he'd
done yesterday – chewing the eraser off his
sister's pencil before putting it back in the pencil jar –
or something he'd done a long time ago that was just now catching up
with him" [p. 57]. What does this passage reveal about the damaging effects of
racism on children? What does it reveal about the way children try to make
sense of their experience?
- In the camp, the prisoners are told they've been brought there for their
"own protection," and that "it was all in the interest of national security.
It was a matter of military necessity. It was an opportunity for them to prove
their loyalty" [p. 70]. Why, and in what ways, are these justifications
problematic? What do they reveal about the attitude of the American government
toward Japanese Americans? How would these justifications appear to those who
were taken from their homes and placed behind fences for the duration of the
war?
- What parallels does the novel reveal between the American treatment of
citizens of Japanese descent and the treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany?
- Much of When the Emperor Was Divine is told in short, episodic,
loosely connected scenes – images, conversations,
memories, dreams, and so on – that move between
past and present and alternate points of view between the mother, daughter,
and son. Why has Otsuka chosen to structure her narrative in this way? What
effects does it allow her to achieve?
- After the family is released from the camp, what instructions are they
given? How do they regard themselves? How does America regard them? In what
ways have they been damaged by their internment?
- When they are at last reunited with their father, the family doesn't know
how to react. "Because the man who stood there before us was not our father.
He was somebody else, a stranger who had been sent back in our father's place"
[p. 132]. Why do they regard him as a stranger? How has he been changed by his
experience? In what ways does this reunion underscore the tragedy of America's
decision to imprison Japanese Americans during the war?
- After the father returns home, he never once discusses the years he'd been
away, and his children don't ask. "We didn't want to know. . . . All we wanted
to do, now that we were back in the world, was forget" [p. 133]. Why do the
children feel this way? Why would their father remain silent about such an
important experience? In what ways does the novel fight against this desire to
forget?
- The mother is denied work because being a Japanese American might "upset
the other employees" or offend the customers. She turns down a job working in
a dark back room of a department store because she is afraid she "might
accidentally remember who I was and . . . offend myself" [pp. 128-129]. What
does this statement reveal about her character? What strengths does she
exhibit throughout her ordeal?
- Flowers appear throughout the novel. When one of the prisoners is shot by
a guard, a witness believes the man had been reaching through the fence to
pluck a flower [see p. 101]. And the penultimate chapter ends with the
following sentence: "But we never stopped believing that somewhere out there,
in some stranger's backyard, our mother's rosebush was blossoming madly,
wildly, pressing one perfect red flower after another out into the late
afternoon light" [p. 139]. What symbolic value do the flowers have in this
final passage? What does this open-ended conclusion suggest about the
relationship between the family and the "strangers" they live among?
- When The Emperor Was Divine
concludes with a chapter titled
"Confession."
Who is speaking in this final chapter? Is the speech ironic? Why has Otsuka
chosen to end the novel in this way? What does the confession imply about our
ability to separate out the "enemy," the "other," in our midst?
Used with the permission of Anchor Books, a division of the Knopf Group,
Random House, Inc., New York, NY.

- When I began reading this book, I thought . . .
- I predict that . . .
- Imagine you are a friend of the family in When The Emperor Was Divine.
You have just learned of their relocation to a Utah internment camp. Write a
short, persuasive letter objecting to the internment of Japanese-Americans
that could be submitted to your local newspaper or elected officials.
- How might other Americans have prevented the damage done by the order to
move Japanese-Americans to internment camps? Imagine yourself as the
editor-in-chief of a nationally distributed newspaper in 1942. Write a memo to
your employees, giving instructions for the topics and placement of a series
of articles that might do the trick.
- This book made me think about. .
- I like the way the writer . . .
- I’d like to ask the writer. .

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City of San Jose
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