@article{oai:naruto.repo.nii.ac.jp:00028997, author = {黒田, 俊太郎 and KURODA, Shuntaro}, journal = {鳴門教育大学研究紀要, Research bulletin of Naruto University of Education}, month = {Mar}, note = {In his lifetime, a writer Naoto Nakajima (1904-40) wrote a little less than 20 novels, all of which are about identities as second-generation Japanese-Americans [Nisei]. Nakajima's parents were Japanese, but he was born in Waipahu, Hawaii. Therefore, Nakajima had dual citizenship in the U.S. and Japan. He moved to Japan in 1919 and made his debut as a novelist with Hawaiiumare-no Kanjyo [Born in Hawaii] (1929) expressing his "longing" for Japan. He then wrote several novels, all based solely on his own experiences in Hawaii but he returned to Hawaii in 1936. In this paper, I first focus on how education influenced the formation of Nisei's identity. For example, I investigate the changes in the content of education for Nisei by the Nikkei community in the early 1900s. In addition, I analyzed the historical characteristics of Nisei as the "Marginal Man" defined by Robert E. Park in 1928. Finally, I examined the subject of Nisei's identity, which is pursued in Hawaiiumare-no Kanjyo. To this end, I tried to clarify the meaning of the message in a bottle delivered to the main character, Yutaka.}, pages = {197--208}, title = {ボトル・メッセージはどこに配達されたか :中島直人「布哇生まれの感情」を読む}, volume = {36}, year = {2021}, yomi = {クロダ, シュンタロウ} }