%0 Journal Article %T ¡®Hawaii, Hawaii/ Like a dream/ So I came/ But my tears/ Are flowing now/In the canefields¡¯: Beauty¡¯s Price in Philip Kan Gotanda¡¯s Ballad of Yachiyo %A Mar¨ªa Isabel Seguro %J Coolabah %D 2009 %I %X Oftentimes popular culture depicts Hawaii as an ideal paradise, representedby images of ¡®[p]alm trees, a distant mountain (frequently a smoking volcano), and ahula maiden, all surmounted by a splendid full moon¡¯ (Brown 1994). Such a pictureclearly contrasts with the labour song quoted in the title of this article, which reflects theexploitation, mainly of Asian workers, in the sugar-cane plantation system¡ªthe originalbasis for (white) American prosperity in the islands since the mid-nineteenth century.Philip Kan Gotanda¡¯s play, Ballad of Yachiyo, which premi¨¨red at Berkeley RepertoryTheatre in 1995, takes place within a Japanese community in early twentieth-centuryHawaii. It is loosely based on the silenced story of the playwright¡¯s aunt who committedsuicide for bringing shame to the family as a result of an extra-marital pregnancy.Gotanda considers that this particular work is not so much about politics, but about ¡®atone¡¯ and a ¡®kind of beautiful sadness¡¯ (1997). Despite the author¡¯s words, Ballad ofYachiyo inevitably has embedded within a political message insofar as it makesreferences, for example, to working conditions in the sugar plantations, the formation ofthe first inter-ethnic (Japanese/Filipino) trade unions and the expectations of Japaneseimmigrants in search of the mythical paradise Hawaii was meant to be. That is, byrecovering what was once a lost voice, Gotanda reconstructs part of his family¡¯smemory as forming part of Hawaii¡¯s recent history. %K Hawaii %K American imperialism %K Ballad of Yachiyo %U http://www.ub.edu/dpfilsa/coola3seguro.pdf