No Quarter Required: Japanese Experiences and Media Distortions in the Steveston Fishers’ Strike of 1900

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
No Quarter Required: Japanese Experiences and Media Distortions in the Steveston Fishers’ Strike of 1900
Abstract
The brief histories of the Steveston Fishers’ Strike of 1900 are dominated by the arrival of the militia on 24 July and images of racialized violence between Japanese and white fishers. This thesis analyzes Japanese language sources and re-evaluates contemporary English language press reports to expand the strike narrative and demonstrate that Japanese fishers held significant negotiating power throughout the standoff. It argues that labeling Japanese as strikebreakers ignores their perspectives and goals in the labour dispute; however, this thesis also explains that there were important differences within the Japanese community and that to speak of a single Japanese perspective is to privilege individuals in positions of power who benefitted financially from fellow community members. It also demonstrates that by emphasizing tensions between groups of fishers, existing histories overlook the fact that the most violent acts of the month were done by the cannery owners through their connections with government.
Type
M.A., History
University
Simon Fraser University
Place
Burnaby, BC
Date
2012
# of Pages
92 pages
Language
English
Short Title
No Quarter Required
Accessed
10/9/23, 6:14 PM
Library Catalog
Google Scholar
Extra
Publisher: Simon Fraser University
Citation
Stielow, T. M. (2012). No Quarter Required: Japanese Experiences and Media Distortions in the Steveston Fishers’ Strike of 1900 [M.A., History, Simon Fraser University]. https://summit.sfu.ca/item/12408