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Hisaye Yamamoto: Wilshire Bus

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Hisaye Yamamoto: Wilshire Bus
Sam Tompkins
Daniel Paxson
Senior English
14 December 2014 Hisaye Yamamoto: Wilshire Bus Rosa Parks will always be known for her courageous acts against racism. Her story of strength and self respect has made her one of the leading ladies in history. Just as Rosa Parks stood up for herself, Esther Kuroiwa fell into the same category. Her story was just another example of how racism constantly continues in this world. Looking through the historical lens and psychoanalytical lens the
Wilshire Bus, by Hisaye Yamamoto is really about racism.
The
Wilshire Bus
, written by Hisaye Yamamoto in 1950 deals with Esther Kuroiwa, a
Japanese­American woman, who is on the way to the hospital in Los Angeles on a Wednesday.
It tells of her thoughts, feelings and reaction to the harassment of the Chinese­American couple behind her on the bus, by a drunken American. Esther is on the “Wilshire Bus” and aims to visit her husband, who suffers back­pain from a war injury in a hospital, each Wednesday. A man, who she notices and classifies as a somatotonic enters the bus, grumbles about the prices and takes a seat behind her. At the next stop a Chinese couple enter the bus. Both the women and her husband, who have problems speaking English, sit down next to and across from Esther respectively. When the bus carries on driving the man, sitting behind her, starts to grouch about a man of the local sporting world, who is quite miserable and is investing some money in the buildings they pass.
After the drunken man said that, the investor wouldn’t give anything to the Chinese, addressing the couple, the elderly women turns round and looks at the man, who starts

addressing and offending the women directly, on grounds of her ethnic belonging. While the man makes jokes at the man’s English, at their race and at their country, Esther starts thinking about her race, whether the Japanese are something better and whether the man offends her as well.

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