The Buddha in the Attic

by

Julie Otsuka

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on The Buddha in the Attic makes teaching easy.
Working as laborers in plantations and fields across California, the husbands immigrated from Japan before the women in search of a new start overseas. Underpaid and overworked, the husbands are diligent workers valued for their reliable, efficient, and docile nature, though they learned that they had to present themselves as obedient and mild in order to survive the everyday racism of their white bosses. To properly settle in America, the men send home for wives through the process of obtaining a picture bride. In doing so, they coerce the unsuspecting women into agreeing to marry them by sending outdated photographs of their younger selves and hiring professional writers to craft their letters. After the husbands and wives unite in California, the husbands go on to maintain the patriarchy of traditional Japanese society, expecting their wives to handle the brunt of childrearing while they enjoy the freedom of gambling and drinking. Despite their relative freedom within their Japanese American families, however, the husbands cannot escape the racist suspicion and violence of white townsfolk. As World War II breaks out, the husbands begin to live their lives in constant fear of what may happen to them or their families.

The Husbands Quotes in The Buddha in the Attic

The The Buddha in the Attic quotes below are all either spoken by The Husbands or refer to The Husbands. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Gender and Autonomy Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1  Quotes

They were handsome young men with dark eyes and full heads of hair and skin that was smooth and unblemished…They looked like our brothers and fathers back home, only better dressed, in gray frock coats and fine Western three-piece suits. Some of them were standing on sidewalks in front of wooden A-frame houses with white picket fences and neatly mowed lawns, and some were leaning in driveways against Model T Fords.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands
Page Number: 3-4
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2  Quotes

They took us by the elbows and said quietly, ‘It’s time.’ They took us before we were ready and the bleeding did not stop for three days. They took us with our white silk kimonos twisted up high over our heads and we were sure we were about to die.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands
Page Number: 19
Explanation and Analysis:

They took us while thinking of some other woman […] and then cursed us afterward when they could find no blood on the sheets. They took us clumsily, and we did not let them touch us again for three years. They took us with more skill than we had ever been taken before and we knew we would always want them […] They took us swiftly, repeatedly, and all throughout the night, and in the morning when we woke we were theirs.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands
Page Number: 21-22
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

The first word of their language we were taught was water […] ‘Learn this word,’ [our husbands] said, ‘and save your life.’ Most of us did, but one of us—Yoshiko, who had […] never seen a weed in her life—did not. She went to bed after her first day at the Marble Ranch and she never woke up.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Bosses
Page Number: 23-24
Explanation and Analysis:

Expect the worst, but do not be surprised by moments of kindness. There is goodness all around. Remember to make them feel comfortable. Be humble. Be polite. Appear eager to please. Say ‘Yes, sir,’ or ‘No, sir,’ and do as you’re told. Better yet, say nothing at all. You now belong to the invisible world.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Bosses
Page Number: 25-26
Explanation and Analysis:

They admired us for our strong backs and nimble hands. Our stamina. Our discipline. Our docile dispositions. Our unusual ability to tolerate the heat, which on summer days in the melon fields of Brawley could reach 120 degrees. They said that our short stature made us ideally suited for work that required stooping low to the ground. Wherever they put us they were pleased.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Bosses
Page Number: 29
Explanation and Analysis:

They did not want us as neighbors in their valleys. They did not want us as friends. We lived in unsightly shacks and could not speak plain English. We cared only about money. Our farming methods were poor. We used too much water […] We were taking over their cauliflower industry. We had taken over their spinach industry. We had a monopoly on their strawberry industry and had cornered their market on beans. We were an unbeatable, unstoppable economic machine[.]

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Townsfolk
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

We gave birth at five in the morning […] and that night our husband began kissing us in bed. I said to him, ‘Can’t you wait?’ We gave birth quietly, like our mothers, who never cried out or complained […] We gave birth easily, in two hours, and then got a headache that stayed with us for five years.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The Japanese American Children
Page Number: 56-57
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

They were silent, weathered men who tramped in and out of the house in their muddy overalls muttering to themselves about sucker growth, the price of green beans, how many crates of celery they thought we could pull this year from the fields. They rarely spoke to their children, or even seemed to remember their names.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The Japanese American Children
Page Number: 63-64
Explanation and Analysis:

They gave themselves new names we had not chosen for them and could barely pronounce […] Many called themselves George. Saburo was called Chinky by all the others because he looked just like a Chinaman. Toshitachi was called Harlem because his skin was so dark.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The Japanese American Children
Page Number: 73
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

A few of us began receiving anonymous letters in the mail, informing us that our husbands would be next […] Others reported that their husbands had been threatened by angry Filipino workers in the fields […] Hitomi, who had worked as a housekeeper at the Prince estate for more than ten years, was held up at gunpoint in broad daylight as she was heading back into town.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Townsfolk
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:

They pulled on their overalls in the countryside and helped us prepare for the harvest one last time, for we had been ordered to till our fields until the very end. This was our contribution to the war effort, we were told. An opportunity for us to prove our loyalty. A way to provide fresh fruits and vegetables for the folks on the home front.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The Japanese American Children, The White Townsfolk
Page Number: 101
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

Most of us left speaking only English, so as not to anger the crowds that had gathered to watch us go. Many of us had lost everything and left saying nothing at all. All of us left wearing white numbered identification tags tied to our collars and lapels.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Townsfolk
Page Number: 105
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

A woman who used to rent to the Nakamuras says they were the best tenants she’s ever had. “Friendly. Polite. And so clean, you could practically eat off their floors.” “And they lived American, too,” says her husband. “Not a Japanese touch anywhere. Not even a vase.”

Related Characters: The White Townsfolk (speaker), The Japanese Women, The Husbands
Page Number: 119
Explanation and Analysis:

Harada Grocery has been taken over by a Chinese man named Wong but otherwise looks exactly the same, and whenever we walk past his window it is easy to imagine that everything is as it was before. But Mr. Harada is no longer with us, and the rest of the Japanese are gone. We speak of them rarely now.

Related Characters: The White Townsfolk (speaker), The Japanese Women, The Husbands
Page Number: 129s
Explanation and Analysis:
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The Husbands Quotes in The Buddha in the Attic

The The Buddha in the Attic quotes below are all either spoken by The Husbands or refer to The Husbands. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Gender and Autonomy Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1  Quotes

They were handsome young men with dark eyes and full heads of hair and skin that was smooth and unblemished…They looked like our brothers and fathers back home, only better dressed, in gray frock coats and fine Western three-piece suits. Some of them were standing on sidewalks in front of wooden A-frame houses with white picket fences and neatly mowed lawns, and some were leaning in driveways against Model T Fords.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands
Page Number: 3-4
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2  Quotes

They took us by the elbows and said quietly, ‘It’s time.’ They took us before we were ready and the bleeding did not stop for three days. They took us with our white silk kimonos twisted up high over our heads and we were sure we were about to die.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands
Page Number: 19
Explanation and Analysis:

They took us while thinking of some other woman […] and then cursed us afterward when they could find no blood on the sheets. They took us clumsily, and we did not let them touch us again for three years. They took us with more skill than we had ever been taken before and we knew we would always want them […] They took us swiftly, repeatedly, and all throughout the night, and in the morning when we woke we were theirs.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands
Page Number: 21-22
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

The first word of their language we were taught was water […] ‘Learn this word,’ [our husbands] said, ‘and save your life.’ Most of us did, but one of us—Yoshiko, who had […] never seen a weed in her life—did not. She went to bed after her first day at the Marble Ranch and she never woke up.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Bosses
Page Number: 23-24
Explanation and Analysis:

Expect the worst, but do not be surprised by moments of kindness. There is goodness all around. Remember to make them feel comfortable. Be humble. Be polite. Appear eager to please. Say ‘Yes, sir,’ or ‘No, sir,’ and do as you’re told. Better yet, say nothing at all. You now belong to the invisible world.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Bosses
Page Number: 25-26
Explanation and Analysis:

They admired us for our strong backs and nimble hands. Our stamina. Our discipline. Our docile dispositions. Our unusual ability to tolerate the heat, which on summer days in the melon fields of Brawley could reach 120 degrees. They said that our short stature made us ideally suited for work that required stooping low to the ground. Wherever they put us they were pleased.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Bosses
Page Number: 29
Explanation and Analysis:

They did not want us as neighbors in their valleys. They did not want us as friends. We lived in unsightly shacks and could not speak plain English. We cared only about money. Our farming methods were poor. We used too much water […] We were taking over their cauliflower industry. We had taken over their spinach industry. We had a monopoly on their strawberry industry and had cornered their market on beans. We were an unbeatable, unstoppable economic machine[.]

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Townsfolk
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

We gave birth at five in the morning […] and that night our husband began kissing us in bed. I said to him, ‘Can’t you wait?’ We gave birth quietly, like our mothers, who never cried out or complained […] We gave birth easily, in two hours, and then got a headache that stayed with us for five years.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The Japanese American Children
Page Number: 56-57
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

They were silent, weathered men who tramped in and out of the house in their muddy overalls muttering to themselves about sucker growth, the price of green beans, how many crates of celery they thought we could pull this year from the fields. They rarely spoke to their children, or even seemed to remember their names.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The Japanese American Children
Page Number: 63-64
Explanation and Analysis:

They gave themselves new names we had not chosen for them and could barely pronounce […] Many called themselves George. Saburo was called Chinky by all the others because he looked just like a Chinaman. Toshitachi was called Harlem because his skin was so dark.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The Japanese American Children
Page Number: 73
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

A few of us began receiving anonymous letters in the mail, informing us that our husbands would be next […] Others reported that their husbands had been threatened by angry Filipino workers in the fields […] Hitomi, who had worked as a housekeeper at the Prince estate for more than ten years, was held up at gunpoint in broad daylight as she was heading back into town.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Townsfolk
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:

They pulled on their overalls in the countryside and helped us prepare for the harvest one last time, for we had been ordered to till our fields until the very end. This was our contribution to the war effort, we were told. An opportunity for us to prove our loyalty. A way to provide fresh fruits and vegetables for the folks on the home front.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The Japanese American Children, The White Townsfolk
Page Number: 101
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

Most of us left speaking only English, so as not to anger the crowds that had gathered to watch us go. Many of us had lost everything and left saying nothing at all. All of us left wearing white numbered identification tags tied to our collars and lapels.

Related Characters: The Japanese Women (speaker), The Husbands, The White Townsfolk
Page Number: 105
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

A woman who used to rent to the Nakamuras says they were the best tenants she’s ever had. “Friendly. Polite. And so clean, you could practically eat off their floors.” “And they lived American, too,” says her husband. “Not a Japanese touch anywhere. Not even a vase.”

Related Characters: The White Townsfolk (speaker), The Japanese Women, The Husbands
Page Number: 119
Explanation and Analysis:

Harada Grocery has been taken over by a Chinese man named Wong but otherwise looks exactly the same, and whenever we walk past his window it is easy to imagine that everything is as it was before. But Mr. Harada is no longer with us, and the rest of the Japanese are gone. We speak of them rarely now.

Related Characters: The White Townsfolk (speaker), The Japanese Women, The Husbands
Page Number: 129s
Explanation and Analysis: