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Korean American Diaspora

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Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US. Images of Asian (American) women in the US ... Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Korean American Diaspora


1
Korean American Diaspora
  • Dr. Young Rae Oum
  • Hanyang International Summer School
  • Session 2
  • History of Asian Immigration in the US

2
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Yen Le Espiritu, Ideological racism and cultural
    resistance in Asian American Women and Men.
  • Controlling Images
  • Cultural symbols and ideas generated by the
    dominant group to help justify the economic
    exploitation and and social oppression.
  • Produced and manipulated by various elites who
    own and control cultural institutions.
  • Naturalize racism, sexism, and poverty by
    branding subordinate groups as inferior,
    threatening, or praiseworthy.
  • Exercise
  • What are your images of Americans?
  • Koreans? Korean-Americans?
  • What are the sources of these images?

3
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Images of Asian (American) women in the US
  • Sexuality is indissociable from the effects of
    polarization and differentiation. I.e. Sexuality
    is always utilized in creating an Other.
  • Two common images of Asian women
  • China doll hyperfeminine, attentive, hypersexual
    (sexually available)
  • Dragon lady castrating, violent, dominant

4
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images
  • Suzie Wong

5
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images
  • Dragon Lady

6
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images
  • How can the contradictory images be associated
    with the same group of women? What is common
    among the two images?
  • China Doll/Suzie Wong/Lotus Blossom vs. Dragon
    Lady
  • Sexually depraved
  • Abnormal (What is the norm)?
  • Exotic
  • Deviant
  • The process of creating Other/Self

7
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images
  • Images of Asian (American) men
  • Early Asian immigrants (late 19C to early 20C)
    were mostly males they were indentured laborers.

  • At the time, Asian men were supposed to be
    hypersexual, sexually aggressive, and dangerous.
    (Oriental rapists were supposed to be
    predatory, that is, eager to rape white women.)
  • Over time, the dominant image evolved to the
    opposite Asian men are now seen as effeminate,
    nerdy, asexual, passive, small-framed, weak
    people.

8
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images
  • Charlie Chan

9
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images

A Wartime propaganda material Titled How to spo
t a Jap. 1942
10
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images
  • Yellow Peril
  • Both Asian American men and women are depicted as
    masculine, dangerous, threatening, and
    untrustworthy on the one hand.
  • Model Minority
  • And on the other hand, both are seen as
    compliant, passive, meek, docile people.

11
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images Yellow Peril (coined by
    Kaiser Wilhelm II in 1895)

The Great Duel between Yellow and White
In this Great Duel between Yellow and White,
the United States, France, Germany, and England
look on as Japan (the emperor in a conspicuously
yellow kimono) tries to knock the white Russian
polar bear off its legs (labeled Korea and
Manchuria). All but invisible is a dagger in the
emperors hand.
12
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images Yellow Peril
  • The idea of yellow peril was used to justify
    xenophobia and the immigration laws that excluded
    Asians, unassimilable aliens.
  • (also see Mia Tuan, p.42)

Gook Soldier 1870-1885 Anti-Chine
se Movement 1880 CA bans marriages with Mo
ngolians 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act 1907
Gentlemans Agreement 1913 CA Alien Land Law
1924 Immigration Act
Dragon lady
Coolie
13
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images Model Minority
  • The idea of model minority was used to pit
    minority groups one against another.


banana
nerd
14
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images
  • Interracial marriages were discouraged and had
    been illegal in many states up until 1960s.
  • A white man-Asian woman union has been more
    accepted but not as equal partners. Asian women,
    sexually available, became yet another
    possession of white men.


15
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Controlling Images


16
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Interracial Marriages
  • (Also see Mia Tuan, p. 34)
  • U.S.-Born or 1.5 Generation Percentages of the
    Koreans who are Married to
  • Spouses Race
  • Husbands Koreans 63.2
  • (24,522) Other Asians 9.2
  • Whites 23.9
  • Blacks 0.1
  • Hispanics/Latinos 3.4
  • Wives Koreans 40.0
  • (34,464) Other Asians 7.5
  • Whites 48.0
  • Blacks 1.4
  • Hispanics/Latinos 2.5


17
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Problems with White male-Asian female unions
  • Rejection of the race/culture on the part of the
    Asian women
  • (Pocahontas mythos, Miss Saigon, Madame
    Butterfly)
  • Internalized racism (desexualization of Asian
    men)
  • Asian men are boring, ugly, too domineering,
    traditonal, abusive etc.
  • Sexualization of white racism


18
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
  • Mia Tuan, Forever Foreigners or Honorary Whites?
    pp. 1-47
  • Asians are still considered new immigrants.
  • Regardless of immigrant generation, always viewed
    as foreigners (Examples)
  • European immigrants have successfully been
    integrated into the mainstream, and consolidated
    into White race. (Examples)
  • Problems with the assimilation model. (E.g.
    middle class African Americans.)

DAmato
Ito
19
Session 2 History of Asian Immigration in the US
Mia Tuan, Forever Foreigners or Honorary Whites?
pp. 1-47 First generation Asian immigrants more
optimistic about being accepted by whites.
Embrace the model minority Asian Americans tend
to see racism as more systemic.
Q Why the difference? Ethnic options for whi
te people vs. Foreignness of Asians
Why the difference? Table 2.6 (p.38) Source
of model minority? 1960s civil rights movement
. Used to defend white establishment to African
Americans.
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