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Issei
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===Canadian {{transliteration|ja|issei}}=== {{main|Japanese Canadians}} Within Japanese-Canadian communities across Canada, like their American counterparts, three distinct subgroups developed, each with different socio-cultural referents, generational identity, and wartime experiences.<ref name="mclellan36">McLellan, Janet. (1999). [https://books.google.com/books?id=NMm024458s4C&dq=Sansei+canada&pg=PA36 ''Many Petals of the Lotus: Five Asian Buddhist Communities in Toronto,'' p. 36.]</ref><ref name="IkawaFumiko">Ikawa, Fumiko. [https://www.jstor.org/pss/667278 "Reviews: ''Umi o Watatta Nippon no Mura'' by Masao Gamo and "''Steveston Monogatari: Sekai no Naka no Nipponjin''" by Kazuko Tsurumi], ''American Anthropologist'' (US). New Series, Vol. 65, No. 1 (Feb. 1963), pp. 152β156.</ref> The narrative of {{transliteration|ja|issei}} Japanese-Canadians include post-Pearl Harbor experiences of uprooting, incarceration, and dispersal of the pre-war Japanese-Canadian communities.<ref>Oiwa, Keibo and Joy Kogawa. (1991). [https://books.google.com/books?id=pAIVAAAAYAAJ&q=uprooting ''Stone Voices: Wartime Writings of Japanese Canadian Issei,'' p. 18.]</ref><!-- Number of ethnic Japanese in Canada? current lives? -->
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