This essay is about how the government made the Japanese internment videos of 1942-1946 seem very joyful, as shown in many of the promotional videos about the camps that started in 1942 and held about 125,000 by the end of 1946. “The people are not under suspicion”. They are not a prisoner. They are not interns. They are merely dislocated people”. This is one quote from the film, spreading propaganda. We have also learned that it was not enjoyable in the internment camps at all, according to sources from former internees. Next, the reason why the Japanese internment camps were built was because of the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. After the attack, many people, including the government, were afraid of Japanese spies hiding within society. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the president at the time, decided that the only way to prevent another attack from happening again was by creating the Japanese in internment camps and it also helps Japanese Americans stay safe and away from danger. More information about the spread during that time period was mainly …show more content…
During the whole film they were playing this almost soothing music to calm the audience, and that seems very weird that they would play such music while talking about moving people by force out of their homes and taking away their freedom. Why would they play this music in the background? I believe that they were playing this music in the background to calm the audience watching and by calming the audience down it would make them take in the film and make it seem as though it was for a good cause because of the music and how it sounded, leaving a joyful message. Connecting it to my claim, this film is showing not much joy or smiles on the internees faces like the picture to the right taken in the film Japanese Relocation on a normal