Behind the Barbed Wire: Japanese-American Internment Camp Newspapers June 28, 2019 1 minute read Interned Japanese-Americans produced newspapers to chronicle the stories and experiences of their community in a time of crisis. By Chris Ehrman and Heather Thomas Originally published by the United States Library of Congress to the public domain. About the Author Matthew McIntosh Administrator Visit Website View All Posts What do you feel about this? 0% Love 0% Funny 0% Wow 0% Sad 0% Angry Post navigation Previous: The 41-Volume Government Report That Turned Immigration into a ProblemNext: The Origins and Growth of Yazidism since the Ancient World Related Stories The Maccabean Rebellion: Antiochus IV, Religious Repression, and Imperial Power March 19, 2026 Morisco Expulsion: Religious Identity, Fear, and State Power in Early Modern Spain March 19, 2026 Anti-Catholic Panic and the Know-Nothing Movement in Nineteenth-Century America March 19, 2026