Stereotyping of Asian personality traits
During the periods of yellow peril in the United States during the late 1800s, the image of Chinese women emerged as sexually corrupt, immoral, and threatening to the white population. During World War II when American soldiers directly interacted with East Asian and Southeast Asian women, the women were portrayed as obedient, passive, and exotic. Babysan, a cartoon character sketched as an exotic, curvaceous, slanted eyed woman, was published in the East Asian edition of the Navy Times during wartime.In the afterword to the 1988 play M. Butterfly, the writer, David Henry Hwang, using the term "yellow fever," a pun on the disease of the same name, discusses white men with a "fetish" for Asian women. Hwang argues that this phenomenon is caused by stereotyping of Asians in Western society. Darrell Hamamoto, a professor at University of California Davis, has stated that the stereotypes are a result of Western imperialist influence in Asian countries and increased interaction between different races in the United States after immigration laws were relaxed in the 1960s. Hamamoto said American soldiers' contact with Vietnamese prostitutes during the Vietnam War have further contributed to reinforcing these images of Asian women.
Phoebe Eng wrote in her book Warrior Lessons,
In her article in San Francisco Examiner, "Asian Women, Caucasian Men", Joan Walsh wrote that some non-Asian men pursued Asian females for "their appearance - and stereotypes about how they treat men." The article referred to a "feminist backlash" that drove Caucasian men away from Caucasian women. She described Asian fetish partially as a result of "inability of men to have intimate relationships with women they see as equals." Practices of marrying mail-order brides from Asian countries is also sustained by sexual stereotypes of Asian women.
The term used for a man, usually white, who exclusively dates Asian males is "rice queen." In a similar manner as Asian females, gay Asian males are stereotyped as submissive.
Studies related to Asian fetishism
Raymond Fisman authored an article published in Salon which claimed that the existence of Asian fetish is a myth. Raymond based his conclusions on the results of a study, "Racial Preferences in Dating," that he helped to conduct. The study, based upon speed dating experiments among Columbia University graduate students, found no general statistically-significant racial preference among males.Dissenting views
Phoebe Eng wrote that not all Asian women "agree that the current trend of 'Asian fetish' is bad" and that "the new visibility of Asian women, even though stereotyped, can actually be liberating." Erika Kim and Tracy Quan believe that the concept of "Asian fetish" is often used to unjustly condemn interracial relationships between non-Asian men and Asian women. Quan has written that terms such as "yellow fever" or "Asian fetish" are often meaningless since many of the relationships are legitimate cases of attraction. The characterization of the term as "racist" has been criticized because it implies that a noted preference for a member of a minority group and the portrayals of minorities as attractive is abnormal.References
See also
External links
- "The Asian America That Can Say 'No'", Modelminority.com. (Originally published in The Daily Californian, September 9, 1991) Accessed February 17, 2006.
- "The Myth Of The Rice King", Vancouver Sun, February 14, 2004.
- "Racial preferences in the dating world", Seacoast Online, May 11, 2007. Accessed May 25, 2007.
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Last updated on Friday October 10, 2008 at 04:41:15 PDT (GMT -0700)
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