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Curator’s Fellowship: Forgotten Dolls, Remembered Stories
October 23 @ 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
$50For the past few months, Curator’s Fellow Polly Yorioka has been conducting extensive research in the MOHAI collection.
Polly has focused her research on the history and significance of the Boy’s and Girl’s Day sets given to Bailey Gatzert Elementary School at the time of the WWII Japanese incarceration.
On October 23, she will present her research in her Curator’s Fellow Lecture: Forgotten Dolls, Remembered Stories, detailing the experiences of Japanese children who struggled with their American identity while unjustly incarcerated, as seen through the dolls they left behind.
Q&A with 2024 Curator’s Fellow, Polly Yorioka
What made you interested in researching this topic?
I was immediately interested in this topic because it connects to my own family history. My grandparents went to Bailey Gatzert Elementary School. My grandmother would always tell me about the Girls’ Day dolls that she had growing up, which she had to leave behind when the war broke out. She said that was one of her biggest losses in her life—out of all the things they left behind, she would always think about her dolls. So, when I saw that there were sets of dolls in the MOHAI collection and that they were from Bailey Gatzert Elementary School, I was really excited to learn more.
What is the most surprising thing you’ve learned working on this project?
I was surprised by how much information there already is about students at Bailey Gatzert Elementary School. There are a lot of stories that have been preserved, which is really nice to see—especially because so many people in these situations didn’t really want to talk about those things.
What makes MOHAI the right place for you to do this research?
I think one of the really great things that MOHAI does is tie together the history of the city and different communities together with technology and industry. That long history of being willing to tell stories that people aren’t always talking about, especially in the Japanese community, makes this the perfect place to do this research. It’s really exciting to get to be part of MOHAI’s legacy.
What do you hope people take away from your presentation later this month?
One of the big reasons this story is important is that it connects to a lot of things in present day. I’ve been reflecting a lot on the danger of misinformation. Thinking about how, at the time, everyone was so afraid of the Japanese and supported sending that community away. Even the children, who clearly couldn’t be enemies of the state.
So, I think that as we do this kind of work, it encourages people to think, “what are the stories I’m hearing now that might not be true?” And hopefully people realize that we can do things differently when given the chance.