3. Michiko SHIMOKOBE,Inland/Oceanic Imagination in Melville’s Redburn: Expansion and Memory in the Political Climate of America
23. Tsuyoshi ISHIHARA, Memory of American Classics: The Legacy of Mark Twain in US School Textbooks, 1930s-1940s
45. Michio ARIMITSU, De-Occidentalized “Projections in the Haiku Manner”: Poetics of Indeterminacy and Transcultural Reconfiguration of “Frog Perspectives” in Richard Wright’s Last Poems
67. Masumi IZUMI, Gila River Concentration Camp and the Historical Memory of Japanese American Mass Incarceration
89. Akiko OCHIAI, A “New Integration” of Memory in the National Museum of African American History and Culture
113. Yoshie TAKAMITSU, Improving US-Japanese Relations through the News Media: Roy W. Howard, Dentsu, and the Osaka Mainichi