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{{Short description|Sexual obsession with Asian people expressed by non-Asians}} | |||
:''This article is not about love and/or interracial relationships. For the latter, see ]. | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2024}} | |||
An '''Asian fetish''' is a strong sexual or romantic preference for people of ] descent or heritage. The term usually refers to women specifically of ] or ] descent,<ref name="FTESEA">{{cite web |title=Fetishization of East and Southeast Asian Women |url=https://ncaatogether.org/2021/03/23/fetishization-of-east-and-southeast-asian-women/ |website=North Carolina Asian Americans Together |date=23 March 2021 |access-date=20 March 2022}}</ref><ref name="Alolika">{{cite web | |||
The term '''Asian fetish''' refers to sexual stereotypes associated with Asians, especially Asian women. | |||
|last=Alolika | |||
It is a ] that may appear in three contexts: | |||
|title=Playboy Petrarch: Racial Fetishism and K-pop | |||
#To denote pornography, the subjects of which are Asian women, often in stereotypical costume or situations, and to describe Western men who seek this form of pornography; | |||
|url=http://seoulbeats.com/2014/02/playboy-petrarch-racial-fetishism-k-pop/ | |||
#By Asian American civil rights activists and authors to describe a form of racism and sexism against Asians and based on stereotypes about Asians; and | |||
|work=SeoulBeats | |||
#As an academic term in ] literary and philosophical theory, referring to the ] of Asians in the western world. | |||
|access-date=24 March 2014|date=21 February 2014 | |||
}}</ref><ref name="Quartz">{{cite web | |||
|last=King | |||
|first=Ritchie | |||
|title=The uncomfortable racial preferences revealed by online dating | |||
|url=http://qz.com/149342/the-uncomfortable-racial-preferences-revealed-by-online-dating/ | |||
|work=Quartz |date=20 November 2013 | |||
|access-date=30 March 2014}}</ref><ref name="Telegraph">{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/womens-life/10935508/Yellow-fever-fetish-Why-do-so-many-white-men-want-to-date-a-Chinese-woman.html|title='Yellow fever' fetish: Why do so many white men want to date a Chinese woman?|date=July 2014|last1=Ren|first1=Yuan}}</ref><ref name="Rosalind">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U7nHoQEACAAJ|title=Asian American Sexual Politics: The Construction of Race, Gender, and Sexuality|first=Rosalind|last= S. Chou|date=5 January 2015|publisher=]|page=65|isbn=9781442209251}}</ref> though may also include those of ] descent.<ref name="Rosalind" /><ref name=":0">{{cite journal|title=Women and capitalist development in Sri Lanka, 1977-87|journal=Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars|author1=Ashoka Bandarage|pages=73–74|date=1998|volume=20 |issue=2 |doi=10.1080/14672715.1988.10404449|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
The origins of ] the people of Asia are unclear. Male ] colonists fetishized ] women in colonial ], on the basis of the darker skin and hair color of the local women.<ref name="colonial" /> Similar accounts were reported in other colonised territories such as ] where it was common for English men to have Indian mistresses against a backdrop where Indian women were sexualised through, what scholars describe as, a typical colonial gaze and viewed as seductive, sensual and exotic.<ref name="Rosalind" /> After World War II, ] gained prominence in American beauty pageants, at a time when large numbers of Japanese war brides were entering the United States.<ref name="Wave" /> | |||
Thus the meaning and interpretation of the term vary depending on the context. An ] search for the term will yield a mix of uses by activists and references to pornography sites, though in all cases it denotes an intense or abnormal ] of a non-], typically a ], to Asian women, primarily ] (such as ], ], ], ]), or to stereotypical images of these women to the point where it may be difficult or impossible for such a man to form relationships with women of his own race, or even non-Asian women in general<ref> | |||
{{cite book | first = Sheridan | last = Prasso | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = 2005 | month = | | |||
title = The Asian Mystique | chapter = 'Race-ism,' Fetish, and Fever | chapterurl = | editor = | others = | edition = | |||
| pages = 132-164 | publisher = Perseus Books | location = Cambridge, MA}}</ref>. Activists frequently stress the abnormal and unhealthy aspects of ] to distinguish Asian fetish from the healthy attraction to Asian women of those in regular interracial relationships. | |||
Targets of Asian fetish report a number of harms and psychological burdens as a result of being fetishized, such as anxiety and doubt about the motivations of those who display interest and difficulty asserting their individuality while being reduced to their race and gender.<ref name=":1" /><ref name=Chang /><ref name="Ryu">{{Cite web |last=Ryu |first=Jenna |title=The dangers of dating as an Asian American woman: 'Fetishization isn't appreciation' |url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/health-wellness/2022/05/10/asian-fetishization-isnt-flattery-how-weve-dehumanized-asian-women/7450959001/ |access-date=2024-03-10 |website=USA TODAY |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name=sMash /><ref name=LuChin /><ref name=Cai /><ref name=Tu /> | |||
Asian American social activists have borrowed from each use (popular fetish, ], and ]) to create their use of the term. | |||
The derogatory term ''yellow fever'' (not be confused with ]) is sometimes used to describe the fetishization of East Asians and Southeast Asian men/women by non-Asians, as well as having a preference for dating or marrying men/women of East Asian and Southeast Asian origin.<ref name="Telegraph"/> The usage of "yellow" stems from the ] that is sometimes applied to people of East Asian descent. | |||
==Popular terminology== | |||
Apart from academic discourse and Asian American social activism, the term ''Asian fetish'' is primarily found applied to ] and, to a lesser degree, online dating services. In this sense it is a colloquial reference to a ]. | |||
While this article and the underlying research largely focuses on heterosexual males with Asian fetish (and mostly White American heterosexual males), Asian fetish can also be ], directed at Asian men, and be held by people of all races who are not Asian.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Jackson |first1=Peter A |title='That's what rice queens study!' white gay desire and representing Asian homosexualities |journal=Journal of Australian Studies |date=January 2000 |volume=24 |issue=65 |pages=181–188 |doi=10.1080/14443050009387602}}</ref> | |||
====Definition==== | |||
According to ''Webster's'' Dictionary, a "fetish" may be: | |||
* Any object believed by superstitious people to have magical power | |||
* Any object or activity to which one is irrationally devoted | |||
* Any non-sexual object, such as a foot or glove, that abnormally excites erotic feelings. | |||
== History == | |||
====Use in pornography==== | |||
{{See also|Stereotypes of East Asians in the United States}} | |||
In popular usage, an Asian fetish is a form of ] in which a man is unusually or abnormally attracted to Asian women. In this sense is an obsession with Asian women or an irrational devotion to stereotypes of them, in contrast to people in normal, healthy interracial relationships. While this is a reference to ], this is normally considered an incorrect or unscientific usage, though it may be considered that the fetishist is devoted to ''stereotypes'' of Asian women (as innocent, submissive and/or promiscuous) more than Asian women themselves<ref name=Lowenstein>{{cite journal | |||
Although there are multiple theories about the origin of the Asian fetish, it has been posited that modern Asian fetishism in the United States emerged in the aftermath of US-led wars in Asia.<ref>{{harvnb|Woan|2008}}</ref><ref name="Ramirez">{{Cite web |last=Ramirez |first=Rachel |date=2021-03-19 |title=The history of fetishizing Asian women |url=https://www.vox.com/22338807/asian-fetish-racism-atlanta-shooting |access-date=2024-09-15 |website=Vox |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
| first=L.F. | last=Lowenstein | year=2002 | month=Summer | title= Fetishes and Their Associated Behavior | |||
| journal=Sexuality and Disability | volume=20 | issue=2 | pages=135 – 147 | |||
}}</ref>. This is the basis for the term when used in conjunction with pornography, where it holds a comparable place to other forms of ] such as ] or ]. However, some argue that Asian facial features may simply be more desireable to the "fetishist", in the same way others might be attacted to those with freckles or blond hair. | |||
In the 1800s, after the ] by ], word began to spread in the United States about the seductive femininity of Asian women.<ref name="Thomas">{{cite book |last1=Thomas |first1=Sabrina |title=Scars of War: The Politics of Paternity and Responsibility for the Amerasians of Vietnam |date=December 2021 |publisher=U of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-1-4962-2935-9 |page=41 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9HxEEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA41 |language=en}}</ref> ] fears that Asian women would seduce White men and destroy White families led to the passage of the ], which prevented Chinese women from entering the United States.<ref name="Thomas" /><ref name="Moore">{{cite book |last1=Moore |first1=John H. |title=Encyclopedia of Race and Racism |date=2008 |publisher=Macmillan Reference USA/Thomson Gale |isbn=978-0-02-866021-9 |page=213 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uU8UAQAAIAAJ&q=asian+women+forbidden+immigration |language=en}}</ref> However, another purpose of the ban was to limit the reproduction of the Chinese working class in America.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ross |first1=Susan Dente |title=Images that Injure: Pictorial Stereotypes in the Media |date=2011 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-0-313-37892-8 |page=144 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PxcsMH5X8YEC&dq=asian+women+forbidden+immigration+chinese+reproduction&pg=PA144 |language=en}} "Having learned from their experiences with African Americans who reproduced and demanded citizenship, education and land, the U.S. government sought to fully control the Asian-American worker by controlling their reproduction and their citizenship rights through laws that prohibited Asian-American female migration."</ref> | |||
Asian fetishists may be sexually attracted to Asians because of stereotypical qualities they believe to be true amongst the Asians, such as innocence, submissiveness, promiscuity, or sexual prowess<ref> | |||
{{cite book | first = Sheridan | last = Prasso | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = 2005 | month = | | |||
title = The Asian Mystique | chapter = 'Race-ism,' Fetish, and Fever | chapterurl = | editor = | others = | edition = | |||
| pages = 132-164 | publisher = Perseus Books | location = Cambridge, MA}}</ref>. Some argue that there is a distinction between individuals who are attracted to Asians for those stereotypes and individuals who are attracted to ], though this does not appear to be supported by its widespread use in denoting pornography. | |||
As early as the 1920s, it was noticed that ] men preferred ] women over Dutch women.<ref name="colonial">{{cite book |last1=Gouda |first1=Frances |title=Dutch Culture Overseas: Colonial Practice in the Netherlands Indies, 1900–1942 |date=2008 |publisher=Equinox Publishing |isbn=978-979-3780-62-7 |page=167 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nN6G-lMk_DEC&pg=PA167 |language=en}}</ref> When ] was a colony of ], a new beauty ideal was established, which ranked local women with light brown skin and lustrous ] at the top.<ref name="colonial" /> The American ] to Indonesia remarked that, to the average man, a mixed-race Indonesian woman was considered more attractive than a "pure" Dutch woman, because Dutch women's complexions were too pale.<ref name="colonial" /> | |||
==Social activism terminology== | |||
Asian American social activists have adopted the term "Asian fetish" from both popular usage and academic usage to address what they see as stereotyping and objectification of Asians in Western society<ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.colorq.org/Articles/article.aspx?d=2005&x=deconstruct | |||
| title=Deconstructing "Asian fetish" - the appeal of physical appearance and/or cultural traits | |||
| publisher= ColorQ World: interracial interacions between people of color | |||
| pages= | date= | accessdate= | |||
}}</ref>. Some argue that there is a distinction between individuals who are attracted to Asians for those stereotypes and individuals who are attracted to ]. However, some Asians do not accept the explanation of a generalized and gender-specific attraction toward Asian women, given the diversity of Asian cultures and different degrees of acculturation among Asians and Asian Americans, and the prevalence of non-gender-specific cultural differences between Asians and Americans. Some Asians also argue that the interest in Asian culture is limited to the most accessible aspects of the culture such as cuisine and fashion.<ref>{{cite news | title=We all scream for chinoiserie | author=Vanessa Hua | date=February 6, 2000 | url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/e/a/2000/02/06/SPECIAL15143.dtl | publisher=San Francisco Examiner}}</ref> | |||
] in 1959. Kojima's victory began the first era of representation of Asian women in the West.]] | |||
===Essay on origins of use in social activism=== | |||
After ], the U.S. military occupied Japan, and U.S. soldiers began to interact with Japanese women.<ref name="Nagatomo">{{cite book |last1=Nagatomo |first1=Diane Hawley |title=Identity, Gender and Teaching English in Japan |date=7 April 2016 |publisher=Multilingual Matters |isbn=978-1-78309-522-3 |page=69 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QaTQCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA65 |language=en}}</ref> Although the American military initially forbid relations with Japanese women; the U.S. servicemen were "enamored" by the femininity of Japanese women, and formed relationships with them anyway.<ref name="Nagatomo" /> There was a perception that Japanese women were superior to American women,<ref name="Nagatomo" /> and there was a widespread sentiment "that a Japanese woman's heart was twice as big as those of her American sisters".<ref name="Nagatomo" /> | |||
The term "Asian fetish" began as slang usage in Asian American subculture, before eventually being adopted by literary authors{{fact}}, but activists trace its origins to the concept of "]", a term coined in 1972 by Asian American authors ] and Jeffrey Paul Chan. | |||
In 1959, ], a Japanese woman, became the first ] woman to win the ] beauty pageant.<ref name="k027">{{cite book | last=Bardsley | first=J. | title=Women and Democracy in Cold War Japan | publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing | series=SOAS Studies in Modern and Contemporary Japan | year=2014 | isbn=978-1-4725-3381-4 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4Gx7AwAAQBAJ&pg=PA153 | access-date=2024-05-24 | page=153 |quote=...the first Japanese, the first Asian, and, in more recent American terminology, the first woman of color to win the Miss Universe contest...}}</ref> That same year, ], also a Japanese woman, won an ]. This period marked the beginning of the phenomenon known as the 'Oriental wave' – during which Asian women first gained prominence in Western media.<ref name="Wave">{{cite book |last1=Lim |first1=Shirley Jennifer |title=A Feeling of Belonging |date=2022 |publisher=New York University Press |isbn=978-0-8147-6524-1 |pages=155–188 |url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.18574/nyu/9780814765241.003.0009/pdf |language=en |chapter=5. Riding the Crest of an Oriental Wave: Foreign-Born Asian "Beauty"|doi=10.18574/nyu/9780814765241.003.0009 }}</ref> The wave mainstreamed a certain type of Asian femininity: slender, shy, and intelligent; yet also sexual.<ref name="Wave" /> It also marked the beginning of the end of White women's dominance as the mainstream beauty ideal in America.<ref name="Wave" /> | |||
:White racism enforces ]. White supremacy is a system of order and a way of perceiving reality. Its purpose is to keep whites on top and set them free. Colored minorities in white reality are stereotypes. Each racial stereotype comes in two models, the acceptable and the unacceptable. The hostile black stud has his acceptable counterpart in the form of Stepin Fetchit. For the savage, kill-crazy ], there is ] and the Hollywood version of ]. For the mad dog ] there's the ] and Pancho. For ] and the ], there is ] and his Number One Son. The unacceptable model is unacceptable because he cannot be controlled by whites. The acceptable model is acceptable because he is tractable. There is racist hate and racist love.<ref>{{cite book | |||
| first = Frank | last = Chin | |||
| coauthors = Jeffery Paul Chan | |||
| year = 1972 | |||
| title = Seeing Through Shuck | |||
| chapter = Racist Love | |||
| chapterurl = http://www.modelminority.com/article1026.html | |||
| editor = Richard Kostelanetz | |||
| pages = p. 65 | |||
| publisher = Ballantine Books | |||
| location = New York}}</ref> | |||
== Terminology and usage of yellow fever == | |||
Chin and Chan conclude that the stereotypes of Asian Americans have been the only successful acceptable stereotypes, and hence the only success story of white racism, and that Asian Americans are prevented from claiming to American history or heritage of their own. While their article on ] did not deal directly with the term Asian fetish, it is still sometimes cited in discussions of Asian fetish. | |||
A common term used for Asian fetishization (particularly with East and Southeast Asians) is ''yellow fever''. The term is used as a derogatory pun on the ], comparing those with a fetish for East and Southeast Asians or "Orientals" to people who are infected with a disease.<ref name="FTESEA"/> Yellow fever is used in Asian fetishization to refer to the ] of people of East Asian descent (and some Southeast Asians) because historically, persons of East Asian heritage have been described as "yellow people" based on the tone of their skin.<ref name=":1">{{harvnb|Zheng|2016}}</ref> Hwang argues that this phenomenon is caused by the ]. The term ''yellow fever'' is analogous to the term '']'', a derogatory expression used for ] associated with dating between different races.<ref name=":1"/> | |||
For example, ] professor Gin Yong Pang writes: | |||
Alexandra Mathieu notes of two different types of fetishism that deal with race: in ''racial fetishism'', stereotypes associated with race become coveted reality with value placed on it instead of mere construction, which differs from ''sexual fetishism'', where body part or object is fetishized or imbued with sexual associations and value. Association of behavior would be racial fetishism, whereas sexual association of characteristic look would be sexual fetishism.<ref name="mathieu">{{cite news |last1=Mathieu |first1=Alexandra |title=For The Last Time, No, I Do Not Have An Asian Fetish |url=http://thoughtcatalog.com/alexandra-mathieu/2013/08/for-the-last-time-no-i-do-not-have-an-asian-fetish/ |access-date=6 October 2024 |work=Thought Catalog |date=12 August 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170619221633/http://thoughtcatalog.com/alexandra-mathieu/2013/08/for-the-last-time-no-i-do-not-have-an-asian-fetish/ |archive-date=2017-06-19}}</ref> | |||
:In my study, many Korean American women encountered White men who, for whatever reasons, pursued and dated exclusively or predominantly Asian/Asian American women. These men were so common and identifiable that the women had special names for them; they were called "Rice Kings" or "Asiaphiles," or men with an "Asian fetish" or "Asian fixation." Their motives were highly suspect; the women perceived these men as demonstrating what Frank Chin and Jeffrey Paul Chan (1972) once regarded as classic examples of "racist love." <ref>{{cite book | |||
| first = Gin Yong | |||
| last = Pang | |||
| year = 1998 | |||
| title = Korean American Women: From Tradition to Modern Feminism | |||
| chapter = Intraethnic, Interracial, and Interethnic Marriages among Korean American Women | |||
| pages = p. 134 | |||
| publisher = Praeger | |||
| location = Boston}}</ref> | |||
== Research on racial preferences == | |||
The earliest printed use of the term by Asian Americans seems to be in a 1982 play (published in 1984) by Asian Canadian playwright Rick Shiomi, entitled ''Yellow Fever'' <ref>{{cite book | |||
In 2007, a study using a sample of 400 ] students at a speed dating event did not find evidence of a preference among White men for women of East Asian descent. The study found that most people preferred to date within their own race.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Fisman |first1=Raymond |last2=Iyengar |first2=Sheena S. |last3=Kamenica |first3=Emir |last4=Simonson |first4=Itamar |date=Jan 2008 |title=Racial Preferences in Dating |url=https://academic.oup.com/restud/article-lookup/doi/10.1111/j.1467-937X.2007.00465.x |journal=Review of Economic Studies |language=en |volume=75 |issue=1 |pages=117–132 |doi=10.1111/j.1467-937X.2007.00465.x |issn=0034-6527}}</ref> | |||
| first = Richard | |||
| last = Shiomi | |||
| year = 1984 | |||
| title = Yellow Fever | |||
| publisher = Playwrights Canada | |||
| location = Toronto}}</ref>, | |||
a term which is interchangeable with Asian fetish in meaning. | |||
Shiomi's comical play is set in ] in Vancouver, and features a private eye named Sam Shikaze, an intended play on the name ]. | |||
However, while it is clear that Shiomi knew of the sexualized sense of the term "Yellow Fever," the play does not deal with Asians specifically in sexualized terms. | |||
A 2013 study using a sample of 126,000 ] users in the US found that all races initiated chats with their own race the most.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lewis |first=Kevin |date=2013-11-19 |title=The limits of racial prejudice |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=110 |issue=47 |pages=18814–18819 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1308501110 |doi-access=free |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=3839718 |pmid=24191008|bibcode=2013PNAS..11018814L }}</ref> | |||
The earliest discussion of that, and of fetishism specifically, seems to be in the play '']'' by ]. | |||
The play, based on a true story, is about a British diplomat who is seduced by a male Chinese spy pretending to be a female "]" opera singer, by playing to the diplomat's stereotypical beliefs of how Chinese women should act. | |||
In the afterward Hwang writes: | |||
Another 2013 study using a sample of 934,000 online daters in 20 US cities found that Asian women received the most messages on average, however, the authors also noted that own-race preference was the predominant trend. The authors noted that their results "contradict the popular belief that white men prefer Asian women over white women".<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Lin |first1=Ken-Hou |last2=Lundquist |first2=Jennifer |date=July 2013 |title=Mate Selection in Cyberspace: The Intersection of Race, Gender, and Education |url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/673129 |journal=American Journal of Sociology |language=en |volume=119 |issue=1 |pages=183–215 |doi=10.1086/673129 |issn=0002-9602}}</ref> | |||
:Heterosexual Asians have long been aware of "Yellow Fever" --Caucasian men with a fetish for exotic Oriental women. I have often heard it said that "Oriental women make the best wives." (Rarely is this heard from the mouths of Asian men, incidentally.) This mythology is exploited by the Oriental mail-order bride trade which has flourished over the decade. American men can now send away forcatalogues of "obedient, domesticated" Asian women looking for husbands. Anyone who believes such stereotypes are a thing of the past need look no further than Manhattan cable television, which advertises call girls from "the exotic east, where men are king; obedient girls, trained in the art of pleasure."<ref>{{cite book | |||
| first = David Henry | |||
| last = Hwang | |||
| year = 1988 | |||
| title = M. Butterfly | |||
| chapter = Afterward | |||
| pages = p. 98 | |||
| publisher = Plume Books | |||
| location = New York}}</ref> | |||
A 2015 study using a sample of 58,880 online daters in 9 Western European countries found that non-Hispanic White women were the most preferred group of women by far, followed by Hispanic and then Asian women. This tendency surpassed own-race preference as the predominant trend.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Potârcă |first1=Gina |last2=Mills |first2=Melinda |date=June 2015 |title=Racial Preferences in Online Dating across European Countries |url=https://academic.oup.com/esr/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/esr/jcu093 |journal=European Sociological Review |language=en |volume=31 |issue=3 |pages=326–341 (see supplementary material, figure A2.2) |doi=10.1093/esr/jcu093 |issn=0266-7215}}</ref> | |||
The first academic treatment of the fetishism of Asian Americans was by ] professor David L. Eng, in his dissertation work at ] University.<ref>{{cite book | |||
| first = David L. | |||
| last = Eng | |||
| year = 2001 | |||
| title = Racial Castration: Managing Masculinity in Asian America | |||
| publisher = Duke University Press | |||
| location = Durham}}</ref> | |||
A 2018 study using a sample of 187,000 online daters in 4 US cities found that Asian women were the most desired group of women.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Nedelman |first1=Michael |date=8 August 2018 |title=Online dating study: Are you chasing people 'out of your league'? |url=https://www.cnn.com/2018/08/08/health/online-dating-out-of-league-desirability-study/index.html |work=CNN |language=en}} "Race plays heavily into the results, with Asian women and white men being the most sought after overall."</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Bruch |first1=Elizabeth E. |last2=Newman |first2=M. E. J. |date=2018-08-03 |title=Aspirational pursuit of mates in online dating markets |journal=Science Advances |language=en |volume=4 |issue=8 |pages=eaap9815 |doi=10.1126/sciadv.aap9815 |issn=2375-2548 |pmc=6082652 |pmid=30101188|arxiv=1808.04840 |bibcode=2018SciA....4.9815B }}</ref> | |||
In 2012, a UK study found that Asian women were rated as more attractive than White and Black women. It was proposed that because Asian women's features are perceived as more ], they are considered more attractive than other women, which could explain the high rate of interracial marriages between Asian women and White men in the UK and US.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lewis |first1=Michael B. |title=A Facial Attractiveness Account of Gender Asymmetries in Interracial Marriage |journal=PLOS ONE |date=9 February 2012 |volume=7 |issue=2 |pages=e31703 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0031703 |doi-access=free |pmid=22347504 |pmc=3276508 |bibcode=2012PLoSO...731703L |language=en |issn=1932-6203}}</ref> A 2018 facial manipulation experiment conducted in Australia was consistent with these hypotheses, finding both Asian and White participants chose to reduce Asian women's "masculine" facial traits less than White women's, which the authors conclude suggests that Asian faces may be more feminine to begin with.<ref name="Stephen Salter Tan Tan 2018 pp. 442–449">{{cite journal | last1=Stephen | first1=Ian D. | last2=Salter | first2=Darby L. H. | last3=Tan | first3=Kok Wei | last4=Tan | first4=Chrystalle B. Y. | last5=Stevenson | first5=Richard J. | title=Sexual dimorphism and attractiveness in Asian and White faces | journal=Visual Cognition | volume=26 | issue=6 | date=3 July 2018 | issn=1350-6285 | doi=10.1080/13506285.2018.1475437 | pages=442–449 | quote= "The perception that White faces are more masculine than Asian faces provides support for Lewis’ (2012) hypothesis that interracial marriage can be explained by differences in sexual dimorphism and thus advances our understanding of the gender asymmetries in interracial marriage."}}</ref> | |||
There is controversy within the Asian American community about the use of the term "Asian fetish". Authors such as Frank Chin and Jeffrey Paul Chan regard it as a form of ] <ref>{{cite book | |||
| first = Frank | last = Chin | authorlink = | coauthors = Jeffery Paul Chan | year = 1972 | month = | |||
| title = Seeing Through Shuck | chapter = Racist Love | chapterurl = http://www.modelminority.com/article1026.html | |||
| editor = Richard Kostelanetz | others = | edition = | pages = 65-79 | publisher = Ballantine Books | |||
| location = New York}}</ref> | |||
and/or an expression of ] | |||
<ref>{{cite journal |first=E. |last=San Juan, Jr. |authorlink= |coauthors = |year=1983 |month=Spring | |||
|title=The Cult of Ethnicity and the Fetish of Pluralism: A Counterhegemonic Critique | |||
|journal=Cultural Critique |volume=18 |issue= |pages=215 – 229}} | |||
</ref> | |||
(whether by white men attracted to Asian women or implicitly by Asian women themselves in rejecting their native culture). | |||
Other authors, such as Phoebe Eng, argue that not all Asians feel that the current trend of "Asian fetish" is bad, since it has given new sexual visibility and liberation to an otherwise invisible and disempowered minority | |||
<ref>{{cite book | |||
| first = Phoebe | |||
| last = Eng | |||
| year = 2000 | |||
| title = Warrior Lessons : An Asian American Woman's Journey into Power | |||
| chapter = She Takes Back Desire | |||
| pages = 115 – 142 | |||
| publisher = Atria | |||
| location = New York}}</ref>. | |||
In contrast, a 2013 Australian study on facial attractiveness with Asian and White participants found that Asian and White women's faces were not different in attractiveness overall, although a slight own-race bias was observed. However, when rating composite faces (the average of many faces, grouped by race, as opposed to real faces), all participants rated the composite faces more highly and rated White women's composite faces the highest. In a follow-up experiment, the researchers found that there was no difference in Asian and White women's perceived facial femininity.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Burke |first1=Darren |last2=Nolan |first2=Caroline |last3=Hayward |first3=William Gordon |last4=Russell |first4=Robert |last5=Sulikowski |first5=Danielle |date=2013-10-01 |title=Is There an Own-Race Preference in Attractiveness? |journal=Evolutionary Psychology |language=en |volume=11 |issue=4 |pages=855–872 |doi=10.1177/147470491301100410 |issn=1474-7049 |pmc=10481032 |pmid=23948346}}</ref> | |||
Criticisms of polarizing authors such as Frank Chin within the academic and novelist communities have been numerous. | |||
Author Shirley Geok-lin Lim writes that some Asian American writing<ref>'''''Aiiieeee!''''' An Anthology of Asian American Writers. ed. Frank Chin et alia. Howard University Press, 1974</ref> cited by proponents of "Asian fetish" has "valorized cultural nationalism and argued for separatist politics".<ref>{{cite | title=Transnational Asian American Literature | publisher=Temple Press | url=http://www.temple.edu/tempress/titles/1810_reg.html}}</ref>. | |||
Moreover, Sau-ling C. Wong and Jeffrey J. Santa Ana write: | |||
A 2008 American study on female facial attractiveness with majority White participants (27 men and 45 women; with a significant proportion of East Asian, and few Black, Hispanic, or Middle-Eastern participants) found that White women's faces were rated most attractive. The study showed gradations of computer-generated racial mixes to the participants in increments of one-quarter. The top three rated faces were 100% White, 75% White 25% Black, and 75% White 25% Asian. To the researchers' surprise, Asian women's faces were rated significantly less attractive than White or Black faces in this study.<ref>{{cite book | vauthors=((Belletti, N. E.)), ((Wade, T. J.)) | title=Racism in the 21st Century | date=1 January 2008 | chapter=Racial characteristics and female facial attractiveness perception among United States university students | pages=93–124 | chapter-url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-79098-5_6 | doi=10.1007/978-0-387-79098-5_6| isbn=978-0-387-79097-8 }}</ref> | |||
:''Frank Chin, perhaps the best known of the androcentric cultural nationalist writers, relies on misogyny and homophobia in his attempt to delineate and construct a (hetero)normative Asian American manhood. In his critique of racist Hollywood caricatures of Asian men, for example, Chin glorifies stereotypes of aggression in black, Latino, and Native American men.''<ref>{{cite journal | |||
| first = Sau-ling C. | |||
| last = Wong | |||
| coauthors = Jeffrey J. Santa Ana | |||
| year = 1999 | |||
| title = Gender and Sexuality in Asian American literature | |||
| pages = 171 – 226 | |||
| journal = Signs | |||
| volume = 25 | |||
| issue = 1 | |||
| month = Autumn | |||
}}</ref> | |||
While the perceived femininity and sexual capital of Asian women may depend on the population studied, Zheng (2016) argues that attraction is influenced significantly by culture, stating "sexualized stereotypes of Asian women contributes to an individual’s sexually preferring them, even if that contribution is not obvious or accessible to introspection."<ref>{{harvnb|Zheng|2016|p=406}}: "It is this double feminization that increases the sexual capital of Asian women but not that of Asian men, a fact perfectly borne out in the oft-noted greater number of relationships between Asian women and White men compared to the number of Asian men in relationships with White women (e.g., Feliciano, Robnett, and Komaie 2009), in attractiveness ratings that rank Asians highest among women but lowest among men (Lewis 2012), and in the greater representation of Asian women compared to Asian men in popular media (Schug et al. 2015). This cross-disciplinary body of work supports the claim that it would be utterly unrealistic to deny that lengthy exposure to a culture historically saturated with sexualized stereotypes of Asian women contributes to an individual’s sexually preferring them, even if that contribution is not obvious or accessible to introspection."</ref> | |||
And Daniel Kim writes that Chin's work suggests: | |||
== Effects of fetishization == | |||
:''...the moral violence we inflict on our assimilated identities is perhaps intended for the 'white man' we glimpse within the shape of our 'Americanized' selves, the 'white man' we wish to beat out of ourselves but cannot.''<ref>{{cite book | |||
Encounters with Asian fetishists are a familiar experience for many Asian-American women.<ref name="Chang">{{Cite web |last=Chang |first=Vickie |date=2006-11-02 |title=Yellow Fever – OC Weekly |url=https://www.ocweekly.com/yellow-fever-6403478/ |access-date=2024-09-15 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="Ramirez" /><ref name="Pham">{{Cite web |date=2021-04-01 |title=Here's how pop culture has perpetuated harmful stereotypes of Asian women |url=https://www.today.com/popculture/here-s-how-pop-culture-has-perpetuated-harmful-stereotypes-asian-t213676 |last=Pham |first=Elise |access-date=2024-09-15 |website=TODAY.com |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Fang">{{Cite web |last=Fang |first=Janet |title=The Deadly Consequences of Hypersexualizing Asian Women |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-deadly-consequences-of-hypersexualizing-asian-women/ |access-date=2024-09-15 |website=Scientific American |language=en}}</ref> Asian women may pick up on clues, such as a history of only dating Asians, even warning each other about potential hotspots for Asian fetishists. While several authors have complicated feelings about the subject, | |||
| first = Daniel | last = Kim | | year = 1998 | |||
<ref name="CruzM">{{cite book |last=Eng |first=Phoebe |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zsPk-4yj3hgC&pg=PA128 |title=Warrior Lessons: An Asian American Woman's Journey Into Power |publisher=Atria Books |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-671-00958-8 |pages=127–128 |quote=Not all of us agree, for instance, that the current trend of "Asian fetish" is bad. In fact, for some of us, the new visibility of Asian women, even though stereotyped, can actually be liberating. As Melissa de la Cruz wrote... "I find something deliciously wicked and liberating about it...In one breath it banishes the image of the asexual, four-eyed, Asian superbrain forever, replacing it with a certain prurient attractiveness reserved only for femmes fatales. Asian fetish? Where do I sign on?" |access-date=2023-10-02}}</ref><ref name="Chen">{{cite web |last1=Chen |first1=Vivienne |title=So, He Likes You Because You're Asian |url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/asian-fetish_b_1626467 |website=HuffPost |access-date=2024-09-15 |date=2012-09-09}}</ref><ref name="Kwan" /> most express frustration at opinions from non-Asians that fetishization is a good thing,<ref name="Chang" /><ref name="Ryu">{{Cite web |last=Ryu |first=Jenna |title=The dangers of dating as an Asian American woman: 'Fetishization isn't appreciation' |url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/health-wellness/2022/05/10/asian-fetishization-isnt-flattery-how-weve-dehumanized-asian-women/7450959001/ |access-date=2024-03-10 |website=USA TODAY |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="sMash">{{cite web |last1=sMash |first1=Lauren |title=Yellow Fever: Dating As an Asian Woman |url=https://everydayfeminism.com/2013/09/dating-as-an-asian-woman/ |website=Everyday Feminism |access-date=2024-09-15 |date=2013-09-25}}</ref><ref name="LuChin">{{cite web |last1=Lu |first1=Chin |title=Why Yellow Fever Is Different Than "Having a Type" |url=https://thebolditalic.com/why-yellow-fever-is-different-than-having-a-type-the-bold-italic-san-francisco-36ed29359dfb |publisher=Medium |access-date=September 15, 2024 |date=2013-06-02}}</ref> pointing out its negative aspects and deconstructing the harmful meanings it entails.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
| title = Q&A: Queer in Asian America | chapter = The Strange Love of Frank Chin | |||
| editor = David L. Eng and Alice Y. Hom | others = | edition = | pages = 270 – 303 | publisher = Temple University Press | |||
| location = Philadelphia}}</ref> | |||
Targets of Asian fetish report feeling depersonalized or homogenized, making them interchangeable with any other Asian woman.<ref name="Chang" /><ref name="Ryu" /><ref name="sMash"/><ref name="LuChin"/><ref name="Cai">{{cite web |last1=Cai |first1=Aleta |title=How It Feels To Be Fetishized As An Asian Sex Worker |url=https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/2016/06/112514/asian-women-fetish-sex-stereotype |website=Refinery29 |access-date=September 15, 2024 |date=June 2, 2016}}</ref><ref name=Tu>{{cite web |last1=Tu |first1=Jessie |title=Because I am small and Asian, I am fetishised by some white men |url=https://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/life-and-relationships/because-i-am-small-and-asian-i-am-fetishised-by-some-white-men-20181126-p50ifk.html |access-date=September 15, 2024 |date=November 28, 2018}}</ref> Depersonalization is particularly negative in a romantic context, where people want to be recognized as individuals.<ref name=":1" /> Depersonalization is a closely related concept to ]. Some authors have written that the objectification of Asian women can lead to violence if the women are seen as objects rather than people.<ref name="zheng 2016 p405">{{harvnb|Zheng|2016|p=405}}: "Even worse, stereotypes about Asian women render them particularly vulnerable to sexual harassment and violence by men who target them on that basis (Cho 1997; Lee 1996; Patel 2009; Park 2012; Woan 2007). There is thus ample reason to be morally concerned about sexualized racial stereotypes of Asian women."</ref><ref name="woan 2008 p275">{{harvnb|Woan|2008|p=275}}: "The history of Western imperialism in Asia and its lingering effects present the greatest source of inequality for diasporic Asian women today. White sexual imperialism, through rape and war, created the hyper-sexualized stereotype of the Asian woman. This stereotype in turn fostered the over-prevalence of Asian women in pornography, the mail-order bride phenomenon, the Asian fetish syndrome, and worst of all, sexual violence against Asian women."</ref><ref name="forbes 2023 q1">{{harvnb|Forbes|Yang|Lim|2023|p=2}}: "The racialized sexual objectification of Asian women is reinforced by the alarming rates of sex trafficking of Asian women to the U.S. and contributes to the other types of racialized and gendered violence experienced by Asian American women, such as intimate partner violence and sexual assault. The murder of six Asian female massage parlor workers in Atlanta in 2021 was a devastating reminder that these intersectional stereotypes exist to empower white men to “eliminate the temptation” of Asian women’s bodies."</ref><ref name="Fang q1">{{harvnb|Fang|2021}}: "It was such a struggle even to get the shooting recognized as race related. Six of the people he killed were women of Asian descent, yet a sheriff’s deputy with a history of anti-Asian Facebook posts told us that there was no evidence the murders were racially motivated—that the shooter, who described himself as a sex addict, had been having a “bad day.” Lots of other white men, including some of my husband’s journalism colleagues, were quick to comment that we shouldn’t jump to conclusions. Well, that’s bullshit. Even for people who did recognize the shootings as an act of racism, I had to explain to them that it’s not just racism. It’s a racialized misogyny that’s very, very specific to Asian women."</ref> | |||
===Sexuality and stereotypes=== | |||
Asian Americans are the subject of numerous stereotypes, many dealing with sexuality. Asian American activists claim these stereotypes are the motive force behind a widespread Asian fetish. | |||
Another reported harm of Asian fetishization is the feeling of being ], or conceived of outside mainstream norms. Possessing "exotic beauty", as opposed to just "beauty", carries the meaning that the type of beauty is necessarily linked to being Asian.<ref name="Chang" /><ref name="Ryu" /> If this is the case, one can only attain beauty by fulfilling stereotypes about Asians. The struggle to have sexuality, but not be defined by racial sexuality, becomes very complicated.<ref name=":1" /><ref name="Kwan">{{Cite journal |last=Kwan |first=SanSan |date=Winter 2002 |title=Scratching the Lotus Blossom Itch |url=http://tessera.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/tessera/article/view/25260/23454 |journal=Tessera |volume=31 |pages=41–48}}</ref> | |||
Though Asians in the U.S. have the highest household income of any other racial group, and some Asians self-identify as a "model minority", and suffer from lower overall rates of crime (see below), Asian American activists such as believe the label and accompanying stereotypes have a negative impact on Asians, , . | |||
These feelings and the psychological burden they entail can persist even when romantic suitors hold no fetishistic intent. The possibility of an Asian fetish or an awareness of the concept can create anxiety and potentially discourage romantic pursuit.<ref name=":1" /><ref name="Chen" /> | |||
Stereotypes include those concerning the sexual ''desirability'' of Asian women, the sexual ''undesirability'' of Asian men, or the relationships of Caucasian men with Asian women (i.e. stereotypes of ''Asian fetishists''). | |||
Nonetheless, some Asian women may embrace certain stereotypes about Asians, such as ]. Others may find advantage in wielding the sexual power it grants, creating strategies to turn the tables and exploit the men who are drawn by racialized femininity.<ref name="Earp Chambers Watson 2022 p. 497">{{cite book |last1=Zheng |first1=Robin |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WWZsEAAAQBAJ&pg=PT497 |title=The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Sex and Sexuality |publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=2022 |isbn=978-1-000-58202-4 |editor-last=Earp |editor-first=B.D. |series=Routledge Handbooks in Philosophy |page=331 |quote=But the targets of racial fetish can also exploit this erotic capital to their own economic advantage, as in the trope of Singaporean “Sarong Party Girls”, who deliberately chase after white men (Hudson 2015)..." |access-date=2024-04-08 |editor-last2=Chambers |editor-first2=Claire |editor-last3=Watson |editor-first3=Lori}}</ref><ref name="Cai" /><ref name="CruzM" /> | |||
====Stereotypes of Asian womanhood==== | |||
<div id=Kim>] and ] has promoted stereotypes of Asian women, such as depicting Asian women as cunning "Dragon Ladies"<ref>'']'' (1924)</ref><ref>'']'' (1931)</ref><ref>Tong, B. (1994). ''Unsubmissive women: Chinese prostitutes in nineteeth-century San Francisco'', ] Press.</ref>, as servile "Lotus Blossom Babies", "China dolls", "]", war brides, or prostitutes <ref>Tajima, R. (1989). Lotus blossoms don't bleed: Images of Asian women., Asian Women United of California's ''Making waves: An anthology of writings by and about Asian American women'', (pp 308-317), ].</ref>. ] Professor of Asian American Studies Elaine Kim has argued that the stereotype of Asian women as ] ] has impeded women's economic mobility and has fostered increased demand in ]s and ] <ref>{{cite journal | first= Elaine |last=Kim | date=1984|title=Asian American writers: A bibliographical review|journal=American Studies International|volume=22|issue=2|pages=41-78.}}</ref>. | |||
Some research has sought to determine how American culture might affect Asian-American body satisfaction. No clear consensus exists. In a meta-analysis of research, Asian-American women showed near-zero difference in average body satisfaction compared to White American women.<ref name=":6">{{Cite journal|last1=Grabe|first1=Shelly|last2=Hyde|first2=Janet Shibley|date=July 2006|title=Ethnicity and body dissatisfaction among women in the United States: A meta-analysis|journal=Psychological Bulletin|volume=132|issue=4|pages=622–640|doi=10.1037/0033-2909.132.4.622|pmid=16822170|issn=0033-2909}} "For example, several researchers have reported that White women are significantly more dissatisfied with their bodies than are their Asian American counterparts (e.g., Akan & Grilo, 1995; Franzoi &Chang, 2002; Mintz & Kashubeck, 1999; Tylka, 2004), whereas others have reported comparable levels of dissatisfaction between the two groups (e.g., Arriaza & Mann, 2001; Cash, Melnyk, &Hrabosky, 2004; Robinson et al., 1996; Siegel, 2002)."</ref> | |||
Activists argue that some stereotypes send the signal that Asian women are romantically attracted to white men only because they are white. In '']'', the daughter of ] lays her eyes on a British detective and instantly falls in love with him. ], '']'' and '']'' also contain scenes where ] or Asian women fall in love with white men at first sight{{citeneeded}}. The website PhilippineNews.com quotes UC Davis Filipino American student Anthony Tadina's criticism of a character in J.K. Rowling's ] books: “Rowling based Cho Chang on what she views Asian girls are -- light skinned, skinny, smart ... the stereotype.”<ref>{{cite news | first=Erin | last=Pangilinan | url= http://www.philippinenews.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=ae7b2bf4b645a3766b265db2086aa302 | |||
| title= Harry Potter and the Asian American image in media | publisher= Philippine News Online | date= July 27, 2005 | accessdate=}}</ref>. | |||
== Fetish and interracial marriage == | |||
====Stereotypes of Asian manhood==== | |||
Kumiko Nemoto writes that since the beginning of the twentieth century, there has been a stereotype of the Asian woman as ], ], and ].<ref name=":4">{{cite book|title=Racing Romance: Love, Power, and Desire among Asian American/White Couples|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1LVjCUXb5T8C|last=Nemoto|first=Kumiko|publisher=Rutgers University Press|year=2009|isbn=9780813548524}}</ref><ref name=":42">{{harvnb|Woan|2008}}</ref> After World War II, particularly feminine images of Asian women made ] between Asian American women and White men popular.<ref name=":4" /> Asian femininity and White masculinity are seen as a sign of modern ] manhood.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":42" /> ] and ] femininity may attract some White men to Asian and Asian American women and men see this femininity as the perfect marital dynamic.<ref name=":4" /> Some White men ] Asian women as "good wives" or "model minorities" because of how Asian women are stereotyped as being particularly feminine.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":42" /> | |||
Some race and gender theorists, as well as Asian American activists, allege that there is a race-based disparity in how men of different races are portrayed in the ]: while white men are shown as protectors of women, and both white and black men are depicted as ], Asian men have been presented as ], and both black and Asian men have been portrayed as threats to white women <ref>Espiritu, Y. E. (1997). Ideological Racism and Cultural Resistance: Constructing Our Own Images, ''Asian American Women and Men'', Rowman & Littlefield Publishing.</ref>. Racist depictions of Asian men as "lascivious and predatory" were common at the turn of the 20th century <ref>Frankenberg, R. (1993). ''White women, race matters: The social construction of whiteness.'', ] Press.</ref>. However, an Asian American media watchdog group <ref></ref> has detected a shift from a "]" stereotype of Asian masculinity to "asexual" and even "homosexual," as suggested in a controversial 2004 article ''Gay or Asian'' in ]. | |||
In preparation for a documentary on Asian fetish called ''Seeking Asian Female'', Chinese-American filmmaker ] interviewed non-Asian men who posted online ]s exclusively seeking Asian women. Things that the men found appealing in Asian women included long ], a "mysterious" appearance with ], possibly increased consideration for their partner, subtlety and quietness, as well as ]. Lum characterized the preconceived stereotype associated with an Asian fetish as an obsession with seeking "somebody ], traditional, docile... the perfect wife who is not going to talk back", but found she had to overcome stereotypes and expectations just like the participants did.<ref name=":5">{{Cite web|url=https://www.npr.org/2012/06/22/155571292/for-one-man-she-had-to-be-pretty-and-asian|title=For One Man, She Had to be Pretty and Asian|last=Martin|first=Michel|date=22 June 2012|website=NPR}}</ref> | |||
Writing about the differences in representation between Asian men and Asian women, ] Professor of Asian American Studies Elaine Kim believes that "Asian women are only sexual for the same reason that Asian men are asexual: both exist to define the white man's virility and the white race's superiority." <ref>{{cite journal |first= Elaine |last= Kim |year=1990 |title= 'Such Opposite Creatures': Men and Women in Asian American Literature |journal=Michigan Quarterly |volume=29 |issue= 1 |pages=68 – 93}} | |||
</ref> | |||
In interviews done by Bitna Kim, "Caucasian" men explain their fetish for Asian women. The Caucasian men interviewed ] that an Asian woman possesses both beauty and brains, that she is "sexy, intelligent, successful, professional, caring, and family oriented"; that she does not wear "White girl clothes" and heavy makeup, and that they are not high maintenance.<ref name=":8">{{cite journal|last=Kim|first=Bitna|date=April 2011|title=Asian Female and Caucasian Male Couples: Exploring the Attraction|journal=Pastoral Psychology|volume=60|issue=2|pages=233–244|doi=10.1007/s11089-010-0312-9|s2cid=143478574}}</ref> Hence, the men believe that Asian women have respectable mannerisms.<ref name=":8" /> These men see Asian women to be exotic, thus desirable, because of their supposed mysterious beauty and possession of a physical appearance perceived to be petite.<ref name=":8" /> Sexually, the men in these interviews had a commonality. While almost all disagreed with describing Asian women as submissive, they all believed that Asian women have submissive sex ("liking to explore new positions, being willing to experiment, or enjoying kinky sex, such as spanking"). They believed that an Asian woman was agreeable and did not mind pleasing men.<ref name=":8" /> These interviews show that some "Caucasian" men with Asian fetish believe that an Asian woman embodies a perfect wife as a "princess in public and a whore in the bedroom".<ref name=":8" /> | |||
Historically, between 1850 and 1940, U.S. ] as well as pre-war and ] ] portrayed Asian men as a military and security threat to the country, and a sexual danger to white women <ref>Wu, W.F. (1982). ''The Yellow Peril: Chinese Americans in American fiction 1850-1940'', Archon Press.</ref>. In the 1916 film ''Petria'', a group of fanatical Japanese who invaded the United States attempted to rape a white woman <ref> Quinsaat, J. (1976). Asians in the media, The shadows in the spotlight. ''Counterpoint: Perspectives on Asian America'' (pp 264-269). ], Asian American Studies Center.</ref>. | |||
Historically, the number of Thai women marrying Western men began to rise in the 1950s and 1960s as a result of Prime Minister ]'s economic policies which attracted foreign investment and Western men to Thailand. There is a social stigma in the country against Thai women marrying White men, who are also referred to as '']'' (a term used for people of European origin), but research published in 2015 indicated that an increasing number of young middle-class Thai women were marrying foreign men. A generation earlier, Thai women marrying foreign men had mostly been working class.<ref name=":13">{{cite web|url=http://prachatai.org/english/node/5352|title=New trend of young, educated Thai women with farang husbands emerges: researcher|website=Prachatai English|author=Yiamyut Sutthichaya|date=28 July 2015}}</ref> | |||
On the physical level, Asian men are stereotyped as being shorter and less well-built than Caucasian men. Traditionally, part of this disparity in ] had much to do with endemic malnutrition in Asia. For example, the average height of males in ] is 5'8.2", while in impoverished ], it is 5'4.9". This difference between the two Koreas, which are highly homogeneous racially, can largely be attributed to chronic famine in the North. By way of reference, the average male height in the United States is 5'9.6". A common perception is that height differences make Asian men less physically desirable when compared to their white or black counterparts. Other stereotypes regarding physical characteristics of Asian men have even less basis in widely-recognized research. | |||
Sources indicate that Sri Lanka is popular among Western "marriage bureaus" which specialize in the pairing of men who were "Europeans, North Americans and other westerners" with foreign women.<ref name=":14">{{cite web|url=http://www.refworld.org/docid/3ae6a80618.html|title=Human Rights Briefs: Women in Sri Lanka|publisher=UNHCR|website=Refworld|access-date=21 August 2017}}</ref> The first and largest wave of Sri Lankan immigrants to ] were ] who came to the country in the 1970s to marry ] they had met back in Sri Lanka.<ref name=":17">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4N5UAgAAQBAJ|title=The Encyclopedia of the Sri Lankan Diaspora|first=Peter|last=Reeves|year=2014|publisher=Editions Didier Millet|isbn=9789814260831|page=157}}</ref> | |||
===Sexual crimes=== | |||
The discussion of sexual crimes in association with an Asian fetish is controversial. There is no statistical evidence linking crimes against Asian women to an "Asian fetish", nor is there any evidence that relationships between non-Asian men and Asian women are measurably different from any others. In general, Asians are less likely to be victims of violent crime than every other major racial group. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, "In 1998, 110 American Indians, 43 blacks, 38 whites and 22 Asians were victims of violence per 1,000 persons age 12 or older in each racial group", <ref>{{cite news | first= Callie | last= Rennison | url= http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/vvr98.htm | |||
| title= Violent Victimization and Race, 1993-98. Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report | |||
| publisher= U.S. Department of Justice | date= March 2001}}</ref> and in a report on hate crimes, "There were no significant differences | |||
in rates of hate crime vulnerability for | |||
racial or ethnic groups."<ref>{{cite news | first= Caroline Wolf | last= Harlow | url= http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/hcrvp.htm | |||
| title= Hate Crimes Reported by Victims and Police. Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report | |||
| publisher= U.S. Department of Justice | date= November 2005}}</ref>. | |||
], Thai, and Sri Lankan women have traveled as ] to Europe, Australia, and New Zealand.<ref>{{cite report|url=http://staging.ilo.org/public/libdoc/ilo/1996/96B09_61_engl.pdf|title=International Labour Migration of Asian Women: Distinctive Characteristics and Policy Concerns|publisher=International Labour Office|author1=Lin Lean Lim|author2=Nana Oishi|location=Geneva|date=February 1996|access-date=2017-08-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170812095937/http://staging.ilo.org/public/libdoc/ilo/1996/96B09_61_engl.pdf|archive-date=2017-08-12|url-status=dead}}</ref> Venny Villapando writes that many of the countries affected by the modern mail-order bride business, typically those in East and South-East Asia, have a history of US military involvement. Soldiers stationed in these countries developed ideas of Asian women as sex workers, ]s and geishas, and applied the resultant stereotype of sexualized obedience to Asian-American women. The marketing techniques used by mail-order bride companies generally reinforce this stereotype.<ref>{{cite book|title=Making Sense of Women's Lives: An Introduction to Women's Studies|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rjT5pSZgGV4C&pg=PA182|editor1-first=Michelle|editor1-last=Plott|editor2-first=Lauri|editor2-last=Umansky|first=Venny|last=Villapando|chapter=The Business of Selling Mail Order Brides|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|date=2000|isbn=9780939693535|page=182}}</ref> Statistics detailing the sponsorship of spouses and fiancées to Australia from 1988 to 1991 show that more women from the Philippines, Singapore, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Indonesia, South Korea, and India were sponsored for citizenship than men from the same countries.<ref name=":16">{{cite report|title=Sponsorship of Spouses and Fiancees into Australia|url=https://www.aph.gov.au/binaries/library/pubs/bp/1992/92bp25.pdf|publisher=Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia: Parliamentary Research Service|number=Background Paper Number 25|date=4 November 1992|issn=1037-2938|author=Adrienne Millbank}}</ref> | |||
Recently, both Asian Pacific American and feminist organizations have given increased attention to sexual crimes committed against Asian women, centered on fetishism, sexual harassment and violent crimes | |||
<ref>{{cite news | first=Phil Tajitsu | last=Nash | |||
| url= http://www.napawf.org/page.php?view=depravity | title=Depravity Against Women On- and Off-campus | |||
| publisher=National Asian Pacific American Women's Forum | pages= | page= | date=Apr 29, 2005 | accessdate=}}</ref>. | |||
Asian American women complain that Asian fetish is considered an annoying but benign phenomenon that does not need to be taken seriously <ref>{{cite news | |||
| author= Kim, Sallie and Stockdale, Shannon | url=http://www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=29233 | |||
| title= For Asian Women, 'Fetish' is Less Than Benign | publisher=] | |||
| date=April 14, 2005 | accessdate=}}</ref>. ] provides a short list of sexual crimes against Asian women. Since repeated sexual offenses which center around a specific object or person are sometimes considered as fetishistic behavior by some psychologists<ref name=Lowenstein />, Asian and Pacific American activists believe that the perpetrators in these crimes had an Asian fetish. | |||
== |
== Tourism == | ||
{{Importance section|date=September 2024|reason=None of these mention fetish. Just commentary on sex tourism to Asian countries without touching upon the topic.}} | |||
The activism community has a number of other terms which are considered equivalent to "Asian fetish" in the activism sense but not in the pornographic sense. Asian fetish has also been called "yellow fever". In ], a ] man who has an Asian fetish may be referred to as a "rice king", "rice lover", or "rice chaser" (a ] man, a "rice queen") <ref>{{cite journal | |||
] is a social phenomenon where individuals, generally heterosexual men from wealthier countries, travel to other countries, in search of sexual experiences. Several countries in Southeast Asia, particularly with strong economic disparities with western countries, have become destinations for sex tourism. Some of these countries include Thailand, the Philippines, Cambodia and Vietnam.<ref name="Hall&Ryan">{{Citation |first1=Michael C. |last1=Hall |first2=Chris |last2=Ryan |title=Paradigms of sex tourism |date=2001 |work=Sex Tourism |url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/mono/10.4324/9780203991763-7/paradigms-sex-tourism-michael-hall-chris-ryan |access-date=2024-03-10 |publisher=Routledge |doi=10.4324/9780203991763-7 |isbn=978-0-203-99176-3}}</ref><ref name=":18">{{Cite web |title='The women who sold their daughters into sex slavery |url=http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2013/12/world/cambodia-child-sex-trade/ |access-date=2024-03-10 |website=www.cnn.com}}</ref>{{irrelevant citation|date=March 2024|reason=The article talks about how a poor Cambodian family sells their Cambodian daughter to a Cambodian man.}} | |||
| first=Daniel | last=Long | year=1996 | month=Summer | title= Formation Processes of Some Japanese Gay Argot Terms | journal=American Speech | volume=71 | issue=2 | pages=215 – 224}}</ref> | |||
Data published in 1999 indicated that an estimated 200,000 to 400,000 German men annually traveled abroad for sex tourism, with the Philippines, Thailand, South Korea, Sri Lanka, and Hong Kong as their main destinations.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RN6TjA_BfRIC|title=Handbook of Intercultural Communication|first1=Helga|last1=Kotthoff|first2=Helen|last2=Spencer-Oatey|date=1 January 2007|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|access-date=21 August 2017|via=Google Books|isbn=9783110198584|page=345}}</ref> For some White men, sex tourism to countries such as Thailand is built around a fantasy that includes the possibility of finding love and romance. According to Dr. David Jedlicka's 1983 study, this idea is based on the stereotype of "the Oriental woman" who is considered to be beautiful and sexually exciting as well as caring, compliant, and submissive.<ref>{{cite book|title=Sexual Nature/Sexual Culture|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=abAhouZID8cC|editor-first1=Paul R|editor-last1=Abramson|editor-first2=Steven D.|editor-last2=Pinkerton|series=Chicago Series on Sexuality|publisher=University of Chicago Press|year=1995|isbn= 9780226001814|page=309}}</ref> Kimberly Hoang writes that there may be mistaken conflation of "submission" with "care".<ref name="Hoang2015">{{cite book |last1=Hoang |first1=Kimberly Kay |title=Dealing in desire: Asian ascendancy, Western decline, and the hidden currencies of global sex work |date=2015 |publisher=University of California Press |location=Oakland, California |isbn=9780520960688 |page=192}}</ref> | |||
== Criticisms == | |||
Men labelled with the term "Asian fetishist" often believe it to be a racist ] of them, claiming that the activists who use the term treat all cases of sexual attraction as objectification or fetishism, dismissing the possibility of normal interracial relationships. In such cases the activists may be accused of being "angry Asian men"<ref>{{cite news | first=Joyce | last=Tizon | |||
| url= http://www.asianweek.com/2000_02_03/feature_asianmale.html | |||
| title= A Threatened Manhood? Exploring the myth of the angry Asian male | |||
| publisher= Asian Week | date= February 3, 2000 | accessdate=}} | |||
</ref>. | |||
Although not as widely recognized as male sex tourism, there have also been cases of western female sex tourism in Indonesia, including Bali.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bali Beach Gigolos Under Fire |url=https://www.asiasentinel.com/p/bali-beach-gigolos-under-fire |date=5 May 2010 |website=Asia Sentinel }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2010-07-01 |title=A cloud over Bali's beautiful beaches |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2010-jul-01-la-fg-indonesia-cowboys-20100702-story.html |access-date=2024-03-10 |website=Los Angeles Times |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
Other critics contend that the ] of an Asian fetish is a means of discouraging ]s or ]. In the past, racial supremacists opposed such relationships, though today in the United States, critics of interracial dating are sometimes Asian males and African American women, which in turn may be considered "reverse" racism. Asian women may date non-Asian men because of unhappiness with certain perceived aspects of Asian culture, whether real or imagined, a scenario presented in the novel '']'', which presents Asian men as sexist and domineering. | |||
Anecdotal reports have stated that some western women visiting ] seek Korean boyfriends in the hope of fulfilling a fantasy based on ] archetypes. This is one aspect of a larger trend called "] tourists". Some authors are concerned that this trend simplifies Korean men into stereotypes, ignoring their complexity as individuals and the realities of relationships.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lee |first=Min Joo |date=2022-03-10 |title=Why some women are traveling to South Korea to find boyfriends |url=http://theconversation.com/why-some-women-are-traveling-to-south-korea-to-find-boyfriends-175905 |access-date=2024-03-10 |website=The Conversation |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-11-22 |title=How the Internet Reevaluated the Swipeability of East Asian Men |url=https://www.teenvogue.com/story/east-asian-men-internet-renaissance-stereotypes-still-abound |access-date=2024-03-10 |website=Teen Vogue |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="affinitymagazine.us">{{Cite web |title=The Rise of K-Pop and the Fetishization of Korean Men – Affinity Magazine |url=https://affinitymagazine.us/2017/03/23/the-rise-of-k-pop-and-the-fetishization-of-korean-men/ |access-date=2024-03-10 |language=en-US |quote=This is not some sort of “yellow fever” or “koreaboo” thing nor any other misnomer given to fetishization. This is the glorification and the demeaning treatment of Korean men and must be chided.}}</ref> | |||
==References== | |||
<div style="font-size: 85%"> | |||
== In popular media == | |||
<references /> | |||
Mirroring the larger mainstream culture, within ], Asian women have long been fetishized.<ref name="Ho Mullen 2008 p. 301">{{cite book | last1=Ho | first1=F. | last2=Mullen | first2=B.V. | title=Afro Asia: Revolutionary Political and Cultural Connections Between African Americans and Asian Americans | publisher=Duke University Press | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-8223-4281-6 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bAgNVYbVJC8C&pg=PA301 | access-date=2024-01-13 | page=301 |quote= Mirroring the larger white mainstream culture, some practitioners of hip hop have borrowed liberally from Asian culture, or have borrowed from the white mainstream’s appropriation of Asian culture. The group 2 Live Crew sampled the Vietnamese woman from Full Metal Jacket saying ‘‘me love you long time.’’ Rappers sport kanji tattoos, sample Asian music, wear Asian clothes, brag about being accepted in Japan, brag about all the Japanese women they’ve slept with, admit fetishes for Asian women, and put Asian models in their videos.}}</ref><ref name="Sciullo 2018 p. 48">{{cite book | last=Sciullo | first=N.J. | title=Communicating Hip-Hop: How Hip-Hop Culture Shapes Popular Culture | publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing | year=2018 | isbn=979-8-216-06351-3 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M3vCEAAAQBAJ&pg=PT48 | access-date=2024-01-12 | page=48|quote= The woman of color as whore was easily transplanted onto Latina women and is egregiously represented in the tropes of the Jezebel and the Asian school girl.}}</ref><ref name="Lane 2007 p. 66">{{cite book | last=Lane | first=J. | title=Under the Boards: The Cultural Revolution in Basketball | publisher=University of Nebraska Press | series=Book collections on Project MUSE | year=2007 | isbn=978-0-8032-0755-4 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nqEfWSh17IwC&pg=PA66 | access-date=2024-01-13 | page=66 |quote= Hip-hop has also changed in recent years. Although still very popular with white kids today, it’s no longer the exclusive means to, or definition of, cool. The shift has come largely because hip-hop is no longer a singular force: it has integrated with Asian cool (there is an infatuation with Asian women in rap videos; Asian-themed hip-hop music videos and kung-fu/hip-hop action movies abound); )}}</ref><ref name="Margallo 2005 p. 65">{{cite book | last=Margallo | first=A.N. | title=Build Or Perish!: People Power Democracy Liberating America's First Empire : Red's Book | publisher=University of Santo Tomas Publishing House | year=2005 | isbn=978-1-4116-0541-1 | page=65 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wdwMAQAAMAAJ |quote= In rap music videos, Asian women are seen as sexual objects as they dance...}}</ref><ref name="Bernardi 2007 p. 253">{{cite book | last=Bernardi | first=D. | title=The Persistence of Whiteness: Race and Contemporary Hollywood Cinema | publisher=Taylor & Francis | year=2007 | isbn=978-1-135-97644-6 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BZnpR4I8cT8C&pg=PT253 | page=253}}</ref> The hip hop group ] eroticized Asian women in their 1988 hit single "'']''", which topped the charts in ].<ref name=":15">{{cite web |url=http://www.radio538.nl/web/show/id=44685/chartid=5185 |title=De Nederlandse Top 40, week 5, 1990 |accessdate=28 October 2008}}</ref> The song was so sexually explicit that the ] banned its sale, however the ban was later overturned after 2 Live Crew filed a ] lawsuit.<ref>{{cite news |title=Opinion {{!}} IN THE NATION; Lyrics and the Law (Published 1990) |work=The New York Times |date=February 1990 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180719203546/https://www.nytimes.com/1990/02/01/opinion/in-the-nation-lyrics-and-the-law.html |archive-date=2018-07-19 |url-status=live |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/02/01/opinion/in-the-nation-lyrics-and-the-law.html |last1=Wicker |first1=Tom }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=In Rap Group's Album, Graphic Sexual Lyrics (Published 1990) |work=The New York Times |date=9 June 1990 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180719203503/https://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/09/us/in-rap-group-s-album-graphic-sexual-lyrics.html?src=pm |archive-date=2018-07-19 |url-status=live |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/09/us/in-rap-group-s-album-graphic-sexual-lyrics.html?src=pm |last1=Watrous |first1=Peter }}</ref> In later songs, 2 Live Crew spoke about their fetish for Asian women, and their desire to have sex with Japanese women.<ref name="Ho Mullen 2008 p. 301" /> Asian models were featured prominently in their music videos.<ref name="Ho Mullen 2008 p. 301" /> | |||
</div> | |||
According to Marenda Tran, Asian women in the media tend to be portrayed in two ways: as an exotic foreigner, docile and nonthreatening and sexual but also innocent; or as the nerd who is still aesthetically pleasing, but also emotionless and career-oriented. This leads many Asian women to believe that they have to be in one of these boxes. It tends to convey the message that if they are smart, they cannot be sexual; or, if they are sexual, they tend to not be aware of it.<ref>{{Cite thesis|title=Relationship among adherence to Asian values, sociocultural attitudes toward appearance, and body objectification in Asian American women|url=http://web.a.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail/detail?vid=0&sid=f410dce8-ef32-4b40-b027-8986ee9a2949@sessionmgr4007&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ==#AN=2010-99020-435&db=psyh|date=2010|first=Marenda|last=Tran}}</ref> By the late 2010s, movies such as '']'' and '']'' began to break these boundaries, but they are movies that center around the Asian experience, allowing for more diversity across Asian characters. | |||
In her essay "Hateful Contraries: Media Images of Asian Women", British filmmaker ] comments that the media's imagery of Asian women is "contradictory" in that it represents them as "completely dominated by their men, mute and oppressed" while also showing them as "sexually erotic creatures".<ref>{{cite book|author-last=Parmar|author-first=Pratihba|editor-first=Amelia|editor-last=Jones|publisher=Psychology Press|year=2003|title=The Feminism and Visual Culture Reader|chapter=Hateful Contraries: Media Images of Asian Women|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nge6bJ-hP8kC|isbn=9780415267052|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/feminismvisualcu0000unse/page/290}}</ref> | |||
In her essay ''Lotus Blossoms Don't Bleed: Images of Asian Women'', American filmmaker ] identifies two basic stereotypes of Asian women in the United States.. The "Lotus Blossom Baby" is a feminine and delicate sexual-romantic object. In contrast, the "]" is treacherous and devious, and in some cases, a ]. Tajima suggests that this view of Asian women contributes to the existence of the Asian ] industry in the US.<ref>{{cite book|title=Making Waves: An Anthology of Writings By and About Asian American Women|publisher=Beacon Press|chapter=Lotus Blossoms Don't Bleed: Images of Asian Women|chapter-url=http://www.samfeder.com/PDF/Making%20Waves_%20Renee%20E.%20Tajima.pdf|first=Renee E. |last=Tajima|editor=Asian Women United of California|location=Boston|year=1989}}</ref> | |||
== Pornography == | |||
Porn performers Saya Song, Jade Kush, and ] have voiced their objections to being cast in heavily stereotyped roles. They point toward ] in the hope that they will grant performers autonomy.<ref>{{Citation | vauthors=((Dickson, EJ)) | date=2021-03-31 | title=Asian porn performers are sick of being fetishized in racist roles | url=https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-features/asian-porn-racism-discrimination-1148275/}}</ref> | |||
] was uncomfortable with fetishization early in her career, but has since grown to embrace it, saying, "I mean, it’s not like guys are watching my movies and laughing. They’re watching my movies and masturbating."<ref>{{Citation | vauthors=((Dickson, EJ)) | date=2014-05-20 | title=Porn Star Asa Akira takes us inside her new book, 'Insatiable' | url=http://www.dailydot.com/irl/asa-akira-memoir-qanda/}}</ref> Mika Tan sees Asian fetishization in porn as a relatively harmless replacement for "trolling the bars with the intent of getting rid of sexual frustrations on any woman who happens along". Her opinion is that "Porn does not create fetishes, it caters to them."<ref>{{cite web | vauthors=((Tan, Mika)) | orig-date=2006-09-23 | date=2016-05-17 | title=Mika Tan (Myspace blog) | url=https://www.adultfyi.com/mika-tan-discusses-the-porn-industry-racism-prostitution/ | via=Adult FYI}} Also archived .</ref> | |||
Philosophy and sociology scholars have also examined Asian fetishization in porn. In Robin Zheng's view, the ubiquity and custom-tailored nature of internet pornography "plays a central role in licensing the self-identification with and public recognition of racialized sexual preferences like yellow fever". She further states that the pornography industry stands to benefit from encouraging Asian fetish as a distinct category to suit their marketing needs.<ref name="zheng2017">{{cite book | vauthors=((Zheng, R.)) | editor=Mikkola M | date=25 May 2017 | chapter=Race and Pornography: The Dilemma of the (Un)Desirable | title=Beyond Speech: Pornography and Analytic Feminist Philosophy Beyond Speech: Pornography and Analytic Feminist Philosophy | pages=189–193 | url=https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190257910.003.0009 | doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190257910.003.0009}}</ref> | |||
Some scholars have theorized the ways in which fetishization in pornography may exacerbate racial stereotypes, with others highlighting the ways Asian porn performers are able to challenge racial stereotypes within their films, while also refuting the idea that they themselves have no control or agency.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors=((Perry, S. L.)), ((Schleifer, C.)) | journal=The Journal of Sex Research | title=Race and Trends in Pornography Viewership, 1973–2016: Examining the moderating roles of gender and religion | volume=56 | issue=1 | pages=62–73 | date=15 December 2017 | url=https://doi.org/10.1080/00224499.2017.1404959 | doi=10.1080/00224499.2017.1404959| pmid=29244541 }}</ref> Zheng says that there is "no way to win" in this scenario: that Asian presence and absence in pornography both have significant downsides.<ref name="zheng2017" /> | |||
{{Importance section|date=September 2024|reason=None of the sources for the bottom paragraph mention fetish. They barely just comment on Asian women in pornography.}} | |||
<!-- Review articles added. Tag should be removed soon. --> | |||
<!-- I noticed how this paragraph is almost an exact copy of the paragraph at Pornography#Critical. Should we just add a see also link to there and give a short summary of it that the secondary sources describe? --> | |||
Gossett and Byrne conducted a content analysis study of 31 "internet rape sites" in 2002 and found that thirty-four of the 56 clear images analyzed depicted Asian women as victims, and that nearly half of the sites contained either text references or images of Asian women.<ref name=Gossett>{{Cite journal |last1=Gossett |first1=Jennifer Lynn |last2=Byrne |first2=Sarah |date=2002 |title="Click Here": A Content Analysis of Internet Rape Sites |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3081955 |journal=Gender and Society |volume=16 |issue=5 |pages=698 |doi=10.1177/089124302236992 |issn=0891-2432 |jstor=3081955 |s2cid=39506826}} "In contrast to the invisible perpetrator, race/ethnicity is of paramount importance in constructing the image of the victim. In our sample, 34 of the images (pictures that are clear and in which the race can be identified) depicted Asian women. Eleven of the sites advertise Asian women in their text through words such as Asian, Japanese, and Chinese. Nearly half (15) of the sites either a text reference to Asian women or an image of an Asian woman. In contrast, no images of Black women being raped were found, although one link to a site that advertises "Black Gang Rape," which is ambiguous as to the victims or the perpetrators are Black. Twenty-four images of white women were found among those where race could be identified. This probably understates the number of images of white women in our sample because no sites specifically advertised white women. One possible exception is a site that offered images of blondes, which is likely to be an advertisement for whites. Only one site has a specific reference to Hispanic women in its text, and no sites identify women as Native American or Indian."</ref><ref name="forbes 2023 q2">{{harvnb|Forbes|Yang|Lim|2023|p=2}}: Disparaging Asian women to images of subservience and hypersexuality is not only represented in mainstream media but it permeates the pornography world. A content analysis found that Asian women are the most represented female victims within violent pornography and rape websites (30).</ref><ref name="woan 2008 p292">{{harvnb|Woan|2008|p=292}}: "Many scholars warn that race-specific pornography contributes to race-specific sexual violence. Since the overwhelming majority of violent pornography features Asian women in particular, it follows that Asian women are at even greater risk of sexual violence due to their role in violent pornography. Helen Zia, a noted social activist, suggests a direct connection between racial-sexual stereotyped pornography and actual violence against Asian women. Additionally, Kandice Chuh argues that 'because Asian/American women are depicted as always consenting, they cannot be raped in the eyes of the law.'"</ref><!--Woan and Forbes added here to establish the connection with article topic.--> In 2016, Zhou and Paul looked at a sample of 3053 videos from ], and found that the 170 videos in the Asian women category had much less aggression, and less objectification than other categories, but that the performers also had less agency in their scenes.<ref name=Zhou>{{Cite journal |last1=Zhou |first1=Yanyan |last2=Paul |first2=Bryant |date=2016-07-16 |title=Lotus Blossom or Dragon Lady: A Content Analysis of "Asian Women" Online Pornography |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s12119-016-9375-9 |journal=Sexuality & Culture |language=en |volume=20 |issue=4 |pages=1083–1100 |doi=10.1007/s12119-016-9375-9 |issn=1095-5143}}</ref> In 2019, Shor and Golriz looked at a sample of 172 videos from ], and they found that the 25+ videos in the Asian/Japanese category had considerably more aggression than those of other categories.<ref name=Shor2018>{{Cite journal |last1=Shor |first1=Eran |last2=Golriz |first2=Golshan |date=2018-09-05 |title=Gender, Race, and Aggression in Mainstream Pornography |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s10508-018-1304-6 |journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior |language=en |volume=48 |issue=3 |pages=739–751 |doi=10.1007/s10508-018-1304-6 |pmid=30187150 |issn=0004-0002}}</ref> Miller & McBain and Rothman deem that findings of the depictions of Asian women and race in pornography aren't consistent or comprehensive.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Miller |first1=Dan J. |last2=McBain |first2=Kerry Anne |title=The Content of Contemporary, Mainstream Pornography: A Literature Review of Content Analytic Studies |journal=American Journal of Sexuality Education |date=3 April 2022 |volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=219–256 |doi=10.1080/15546128.2021.2019648|url=https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/71215/1/JCU_Miller%20%26%20McBain%202021%20AJSE%20Accepted%20MS.pdf }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Rothman |first1=Emily F. |title=Pornography and public health |date=2021 |publisher=Oxford university press |location=New York |isbn=9780190075477}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
{{Colbegin}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* '']'' – UK pornographic magazine | |||
* '']'' – U.S. pornographic magazine | |||
* {{Section link|Stereotypes of East Asians in the United States|Women}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
{{Colend}} | |||
== |
== Citations == | ||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
===On Asian fetish=== | |||
*, Campusprogress.org, May 24, 2005. -- News survey of campus racial bias cases. ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
* An Asian American man believes the concept called the Asian fetish does not exist and is only supported by racist Asians. | |||
===Opinion/Editorial=== | |||
*, ], January 26, 2004. -- Op-ed piece from Harvard student newspaper. ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
*, ], May 27, 2005. ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
*, Punchandus.com, October/November 2005 issue. -- Humor. ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
*, Zukazuka.com, 2002. ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
*, Modelminority.com. (Originally published on ], April 22, 1992) ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
*, Modelminority.com. (Originally published in ], September 9, 1991) ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
* ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
== |
== References == | ||
*, ], December 4, 2003. -- Sex-advice column. ''Accessed February 17, 2006.'' | |||
* {{Cite web |last=Fang |first=Janet |title=The Deadly Consequences of Hypersexualizing Asian Women |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-deadly-consequences-of-hypersexualizing-asian-women/ |date=2021-04-19 |access-date=2024-09-15 |website=Scientific American |language=en}} | |||
* | |||
* {{cite journal | last1 = Forbes | first1 = Nicola| last2 = Yang | first2 = Lauren C. | last3 = Lim | first3 = Sahnah | journal=Frontiers in Public Health | title=Intersectional discrimination and its impact on Asian American women's mental health: A mixed-methods scoping review | volume=11 | date=27 February 2023 | doi=10.3389/fpubh.2023.993396| doi-access = free| pmid = 36923035| pmc = 10008964}} | |||
* (dedicated to Asian-males, by non-Asian females) | |||
* {{cite journal |title=Racial Violence against Asian Americans |journal=Harvard Law Review |date=June 1993 |volume=106 |issue=8 |pages=1926–43 |doi=10.2307/1341790 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1341790 |publisher=The Harvard Law Review Association |jstor=1341790 | ref = {{SfnRef|Harvard Law Review|1993}} }} | |||
* | |||
* {{Cite journal |last=Woan |first=Sunny |date=March 2008 |title=White Sexual Imperialism: A Theory of Asian Feminist Jurisprudence |journal=Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice |volume=14 |issue=2 |pages=2, 19 |issn=1535-0843 |url= http://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/crsj/vol14/iss2/5/}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last=Zheng |first=Robin |date=2016 |title=Why Yellow Fever Isn't Flattering: A Case against Racial Fetishes |url=https://philpapers.org/archive/ROBWYF-2.pdf |journal=Journal of the American Philosophical Association |volume=2 |issue=3 |pages=400–419 |doi=10.1017/apa.2016.25 |doi-access=free}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
* {{cite journal|url=http://poseidon01.ssrn.com/delivery.php?ID=620116007095112065099071069064123067035074090016037034077027124100120001078007087068098110016004116055039013031125028110001037094021022085112106018080024002008062017046068080006000120095028097068084108011113123028085091123004101099117089064072087&EXT=pdf|first1=Dan|last1=Ariely|first2=Gunter J.|last2=Hitsch|first3=Ali|last3=Hortacsu|year=2006|title=What Makes You Click? — Mate Preferences and Matching Outcomes in Online Dating|journal=MIT Sloan Research Paper No. 4603-06|ssrn=895442}} | |||
* {{cite journal|doi=10.1080/00223980.1995.9914971|first1=Jon K.|last1=Mills|first2=Jennifer|last2=Daly|first3=Amy|last3=Longmore|first4=Gina|last4=Kilbridge|year=1995|title=A Note on Family Acceptance Involving Interracial Friendships and Romantic Relationships|journal=The Journal of Psychology|volume=129|issue=3|pages=349–51}} | |||
* {{cite web | title=Femininity and Dateability: A Look at the Perception of Asian Faces | last=Yang | first=Grace | website=sc.edu | date=22 May 2020 | url=https://sc.edu/about/offices_and_divisions/research/news_and_pubs/caravel/archive/2022/2022_dateability.php }} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Mikkola | first=M. | title=Beyond Speech: Pornography and Analytic Feminist Philosophy | publisher=Oxford University Press | series=Studies in feminist philosophy | year=2017 | isbn=978-0-19-025791-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LXcLDgAAQBAJ | access-date=2023-12-31}} | |||
* {{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U7nHoQEACAAJ|title=Asian American Sexual Politics: The Construction of Race, Gender, and Sexuality|first=Rosalind|last= S. Chou|date=5 January 2015|publisher=]|page=65|isbn=9781442209251}} | |||
==External links== | |||
{{Wiktionary|Asiaphile}} | |||
* − a documentary by Debbie Lum (official website) | |||
* at ] | |||
{{Sex fetish}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Asian Fetish}} | |||
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] | ] | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:06, 22 December 2024
The neutrality of this article is disputed. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met. (September 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
An Asian fetish is a strong sexual or romantic preference for people of Asian descent or heritage. The term usually refers to women specifically of East or Southeast Asian descent, though may also include those of South Asian descent.
The origins of sexually "fetishizing" the people of Asia are unclear. Male Dutch colonists fetishized Southeast Asian women in colonial Indonesia, on the basis of the darker skin and hair color of the local women. Similar accounts were reported in other colonised territories such as British India where it was common for English men to have Indian mistresses against a backdrop where Indian women were sexualised through, what scholars describe as, a typical colonial gaze and viewed as seductive, sensual and exotic. After World War II, Japanese women gained prominence in American beauty pageants, at a time when large numbers of Japanese war brides were entering the United States.
Targets of Asian fetish report a number of harms and psychological burdens as a result of being fetishized, such as anxiety and doubt about the motivations of those who display interest and difficulty asserting their individuality while being reduced to their race and gender.
The derogatory term yellow fever (not be confused with the disease) is sometimes used to describe the fetishization of East Asians and Southeast Asian men/women by non-Asians, as well as having a preference for dating or marrying men/women of East Asian and Southeast Asian origin. The usage of "yellow" stems from the color terminology for race that is sometimes applied to people of East Asian descent.
While this article and the underlying research largely focuses on heterosexual males with Asian fetish (and mostly White American heterosexual males), Asian fetish can also be homosexual, directed at Asian men, and be held by people of all races who are not Asian.
History
See also: Stereotypes of East Asians in the United StatesAlthough there are multiple theories about the origin of the Asian fetish, it has been posited that modern Asian fetishism in the United States emerged in the aftermath of US-led wars in Asia.
In the 1800s, after the opening of Japan by Matthew Perry, word began to spread in the United States about the seductive femininity of Asian women. Nationalistic fears that Asian women would seduce White men and destroy White families led to the passage of the Page Act of 1875, which prevented Chinese women from entering the United States. However, another purpose of the ban was to limit the reproduction of the Chinese working class in America.
As early as the 1920s, it was noticed that Dutch men preferred South East Asian women over Dutch women. When Indonesia was a colony of the Netherlands, a new beauty ideal was established, which ranked local women with light brown skin and lustrous black hair at the top. The American consul general to Indonesia remarked that, to the average man, a mixed-race Indonesian woman was considered more attractive than a "pure" Dutch woman, because Dutch women's complexions were too pale.
After World War II, the U.S. military occupied Japan, and U.S. soldiers began to interact with Japanese women. Although the American military initially forbid relations with Japanese women; the U.S. servicemen were "enamored" by the femininity of Japanese women, and formed relationships with them anyway. There was a perception that Japanese women were superior to American women, and there was a widespread sentiment "that a Japanese woman's heart was twice as big as those of her American sisters".
In 1959, Akiko Kojima, a Japanese woman, became the first non-White woman to win the Miss Universe beauty pageant. That same year, Miyoshi Umeki, also a Japanese woman, won an Academy Award. This period marked the beginning of the phenomenon known as the 'Oriental wave' – during which Asian women first gained prominence in Western media. The wave mainstreamed a certain type of Asian femininity: slender, shy, and intelligent; yet also sexual. It also marked the beginning of the end of White women's dominance as the mainstream beauty ideal in America.
Terminology and usage of yellow fever
A common term used for Asian fetishization (particularly with East and Southeast Asians) is yellow fever. The term is used as a derogatory pun on the disease of the same name, comparing those with a fetish for East and Southeast Asians or "Orientals" to people who are infected with a disease. Yellow fever is used in Asian fetishization to refer to the color terminology of people of East Asian descent (and some Southeast Asians) because historically, persons of East Asian heritage have been described as "yellow people" based on the tone of their skin. Hwang argues that this phenomenon is caused by the stereotyping of Asians in Western society. The term yellow fever is analogous to the term jungle fever, a derogatory expression used for racial fetishism associated with dating between different races.
Alexandra Mathieu notes of two different types of fetishism that deal with race: in racial fetishism, stereotypes associated with race become coveted reality with value placed on it instead of mere construction, which differs from sexual fetishism, where body part or object is fetishized or imbued with sexual associations and value. Association of behavior would be racial fetishism, whereas sexual association of characteristic look would be sexual fetishism.
Research on racial preferences
In 2007, a study using a sample of 400 Columbia University students at a speed dating event did not find evidence of a preference among White men for women of East Asian descent. The study found that most people preferred to date within their own race.
A 2013 study using a sample of 126,000 OkCupid users in the US found that all races initiated chats with their own race the most.
Another 2013 study using a sample of 934,000 online daters in 20 US cities found that Asian women received the most messages on average, however, the authors also noted that own-race preference was the predominant trend. The authors noted that their results "contradict the popular belief that white men prefer Asian women over white women".
A 2015 study using a sample of 58,880 online daters in 9 Western European countries found that non-Hispanic White women were the most preferred group of women by far, followed by Hispanic and then Asian women. This tendency surpassed own-race preference as the predominant trend.
A 2018 study using a sample of 187,000 online daters in 4 US cities found that Asian women were the most desired group of women.
In 2012, a UK study found that Asian women were rated as more attractive than White and Black women. It was proposed that because Asian women's features are perceived as more feminine, they are considered more attractive than other women, which could explain the high rate of interracial marriages between Asian women and White men in the UK and US. A 2018 facial manipulation experiment conducted in Australia was consistent with these hypotheses, finding both Asian and White participants chose to reduce Asian women's "masculine" facial traits less than White women's, which the authors conclude suggests that Asian faces may be more feminine to begin with.
In contrast, a 2013 Australian study on facial attractiveness with Asian and White participants found that Asian and White women's faces were not different in attractiveness overall, although a slight own-race bias was observed. However, when rating composite faces (the average of many faces, grouped by race, as opposed to real faces), all participants rated the composite faces more highly and rated White women's composite faces the highest. In a follow-up experiment, the researchers found that there was no difference in Asian and White women's perceived facial femininity.
A 2008 American study on female facial attractiveness with majority White participants (27 men and 45 women; with a significant proportion of East Asian, and few Black, Hispanic, or Middle-Eastern participants) found that White women's faces were rated most attractive. The study showed gradations of computer-generated racial mixes to the participants in increments of one-quarter. The top three rated faces were 100% White, 75% White 25% Black, and 75% White 25% Asian. To the researchers' surprise, Asian women's faces were rated significantly less attractive than White or Black faces in this study.
While the perceived femininity and sexual capital of Asian women may depend on the population studied, Zheng (2016) argues that attraction is influenced significantly by culture, stating "sexualized stereotypes of Asian women contributes to an individual’s sexually preferring them, even if that contribution is not obvious or accessible to introspection."
Effects of fetishization
Encounters with Asian fetishists are a familiar experience for many Asian-American women. Asian women may pick up on clues, such as a history of only dating Asians, even warning each other about potential hotspots for Asian fetishists. While several authors have complicated feelings about the subject, most express frustration at opinions from non-Asians that fetishization is a good thing, pointing out its negative aspects and deconstructing the harmful meanings it entails.
Targets of Asian fetish report feeling depersonalized or homogenized, making them interchangeable with any other Asian woman. Depersonalization is particularly negative in a romantic context, where people want to be recognized as individuals. Depersonalization is a closely related concept to objectification. Some authors have written that the objectification of Asian women can lead to violence if the women are seen as objects rather than people.
Another reported harm of Asian fetishization is the feeling of being "othered", or conceived of outside mainstream norms. Possessing "exotic beauty", as opposed to just "beauty", carries the meaning that the type of beauty is necessarily linked to being Asian. If this is the case, one can only attain beauty by fulfilling stereotypes about Asians. The struggle to have sexuality, but not be defined by racial sexuality, becomes very complicated.
These feelings and the psychological burden they entail can persist even when romantic suitors hold no fetishistic intent. The possibility of an Asian fetish or an awareness of the concept can create anxiety and potentially discourage romantic pursuit.
Nonetheless, some Asian women may embrace certain stereotypes about Asians, such as intelligence and rising Asian economic power. Others may find advantage in wielding the sexual power it grants, creating strategies to turn the tables and exploit the men who are drawn by racialized femininity.
Some research has sought to determine how American culture might affect Asian-American body satisfaction. No clear consensus exists. In a meta-analysis of research, Asian-American women showed near-zero difference in average body satisfaction compared to White American women.
Fetish and interracial marriage
Kumiko Nemoto writes that since the beginning of the twentieth century, there has been a stereotype of the Asian woman as subservient, loyal, and family oriented. After World War II, particularly feminine images of Asian women made interracial marriage between Asian American women and White men popular. Asian femininity and White masculinity are seen as a sign of modern middle-class manhood. Postcolonial and model minority femininity may attract some White men to Asian and Asian American women and men see this femininity as the perfect marital dynamic. Some White men racialize Asian women as "good wives" or "model minorities" because of how Asian women are stereotyped as being particularly feminine.
In preparation for a documentary on Asian fetish called Seeking Asian Female, Chinese-American filmmaker Debbie Lum interviewed non-Asian men who posted online personal ads exclusively seeking Asian women. Things that the men found appealing in Asian women included long black hair, a "mysterious" appearance with dark eyes, possibly increased consideration for their partner, subtlety and quietness, as well as Asian women's eyelids. Lum characterized the preconceived stereotype associated with an Asian fetish as an obsession with seeking "somebody submissive, traditional, docile... the perfect wife who is not going to talk back", but found she had to overcome stereotypes and expectations just like the participants did.
In interviews done by Bitna Kim, "Caucasian" men explain their fetish for Asian women. The Caucasian men interviewed fantasize that an Asian woman possesses both beauty and brains, that she is "sexy, intelligent, successful, professional, caring, and family oriented"; that she does not wear "White girl clothes" and heavy makeup, and that they are not high maintenance. Hence, the men believe that Asian women have respectable mannerisms. These men see Asian women to be exotic, thus desirable, because of their supposed mysterious beauty and possession of a physical appearance perceived to be petite. Sexually, the men in these interviews had a commonality. While almost all disagreed with describing Asian women as submissive, they all believed that Asian women have submissive sex ("liking to explore new positions, being willing to experiment, or enjoying kinky sex, such as spanking"). They believed that an Asian woman was agreeable and did not mind pleasing men. These interviews show that some "Caucasian" men with Asian fetish believe that an Asian woman embodies a perfect wife as a "princess in public and a whore in the bedroom".
Historically, the number of Thai women marrying Western men began to rise in the 1950s and 1960s as a result of Prime Minister Sarit Thanarat's economic policies which attracted foreign investment and Western men to Thailand. There is a social stigma in the country against Thai women marrying White men, who are also referred to as farang (a term used for people of European origin), but research published in 2015 indicated that an increasing number of young middle-class Thai women were marrying foreign men. A generation earlier, Thai women marrying foreign men had mostly been working class.
Sources indicate that Sri Lanka is popular among Western "marriage bureaus" which specialize in the pairing of men who were "Europeans, North Americans and other westerners" with foreign women. The first and largest wave of Sri Lankan immigrants to Denmark were Sinhalese women who came to the country in the 1970s to marry Danish men they had met back in Sri Lanka.
Filipina, Thai, and Sri Lankan women have traveled as mail-order brides to Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. Venny Villapando writes that many of the countries affected by the modern mail-order bride business, typically those in East and South-East Asia, have a history of US military involvement. Soldiers stationed in these countries developed ideas of Asian women as sex workers, bargirls and geishas, and applied the resultant stereotype of sexualized obedience to Asian-American women. The marketing techniques used by mail-order bride companies generally reinforce this stereotype. Statistics detailing the sponsorship of spouses and fiancées to Australia from 1988 to 1991 show that more women from the Philippines, Singapore, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Indonesia, South Korea, and India were sponsored for citizenship than men from the same countries.
Tourism
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Sex tourism is a social phenomenon where individuals, generally heterosexual men from wealthier countries, travel to other countries, in search of sexual experiences. Several countries in Southeast Asia, particularly with strong economic disparities with western countries, have become destinations for sex tourism. Some of these countries include Thailand, the Philippines, Cambodia and Vietnam.
Data published in 1999 indicated that an estimated 200,000 to 400,000 German men annually traveled abroad for sex tourism, with the Philippines, Thailand, South Korea, Sri Lanka, and Hong Kong as their main destinations. For some White men, sex tourism to countries such as Thailand is built around a fantasy that includes the possibility of finding love and romance. According to Dr. David Jedlicka's 1983 study, this idea is based on the stereotype of "the Oriental woman" who is considered to be beautiful and sexually exciting as well as caring, compliant, and submissive. Kimberly Hoang writes that there may be mistaken conflation of "submission" with "care".
Although not as widely recognized as male sex tourism, there have also been cases of western female sex tourism in Indonesia, including Bali.
Anecdotal reports have stated that some western women visiting South Korea seek Korean boyfriends in the hope of fulfilling a fantasy based on K-drama archetypes. This is one aspect of a larger trend called "Hallyu tourists". Some authors are concerned that this trend simplifies Korean men into stereotypes, ignoring their complexity as individuals and the realities of relationships.
In popular media
Mirroring the larger mainstream culture, within hip-hop culture, Asian women have long been fetishized. The hip hop group 2 Live Crew eroticized Asian women in their 1988 hit single "Me So Horny", which topped the charts in the Netherlands. The song was so sexually explicit that the State of Florida banned its sale, however the ban was later overturned after 2 Live Crew filed a free speech lawsuit. In later songs, 2 Live Crew spoke about their fetish for Asian women, and their desire to have sex with Japanese women. Asian models were featured prominently in their music videos.
According to Marenda Tran, Asian women in the media tend to be portrayed in two ways: as an exotic foreigner, docile and nonthreatening and sexual but also innocent; or as the nerd who is still aesthetically pleasing, but also emotionless and career-oriented. This leads many Asian women to believe that they have to be in one of these boxes. It tends to convey the message that if they are smart, they cannot be sexual; or, if they are sexual, they tend to not be aware of it. By the late 2010s, movies such as Crazy Rich Asians and The Farewell began to break these boundaries, but they are movies that center around the Asian experience, allowing for more diversity across Asian characters.
In her essay "Hateful Contraries: Media Images of Asian Women", British filmmaker Pratibha Parmar comments that the media's imagery of Asian women is "contradictory" in that it represents them as "completely dominated by their men, mute and oppressed" while also showing them as "sexually erotic creatures".
In her essay Lotus Blossoms Don't Bleed: Images of Asian Women, American filmmaker Renee Tajima-Peña identifies two basic stereotypes of Asian women in the United States.. The "Lotus Blossom Baby" is a feminine and delicate sexual-romantic object. In contrast, the "Dragon Lady" is treacherous and devious, and in some cases, a madam. Tajima suggests that this view of Asian women contributes to the existence of the Asian mail-order bride industry in the US.
Pornography
Porn performers Saya Song, Jade Kush, and Venus Lux have voiced their objections to being cast in heavily stereotyped roles. They point toward creator-oriented platforms in the hope that they will grant performers autonomy.
Asa Akira was uncomfortable with fetishization early in her career, but has since grown to embrace it, saying, "I mean, it’s not like guys are watching my movies and laughing. They’re watching my movies and masturbating." Mika Tan sees Asian fetishization in porn as a relatively harmless replacement for "trolling the bars with the intent of getting rid of sexual frustrations on any woman who happens along". Her opinion is that "Porn does not create fetishes, it caters to them."
Philosophy and sociology scholars have also examined Asian fetishization in porn. In Robin Zheng's view, the ubiquity and custom-tailored nature of internet pornography "plays a central role in licensing the self-identification with and public recognition of racialized sexual preferences like yellow fever". She further states that the pornography industry stands to benefit from encouraging Asian fetish as a distinct category to suit their marketing needs.
Some scholars have theorized the ways in which fetishization in pornography may exacerbate racial stereotypes, with others highlighting the ways Asian porn performers are able to challenge racial stereotypes within their films, while also refuting the idea that they themselves have no control or agency. Zheng says that there is "no way to win" in this scenario: that Asian presence and absence in pornography both have significant downsides.
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Gossett and Byrne conducted a content analysis study of 31 "internet rape sites" in 2002 and found that thirty-four of the 56 clear images analyzed depicted Asian women as victims, and that nearly half of the sites contained either text references or images of Asian women. In 2016, Zhou and Paul looked at a sample of 3053 videos from XVideos, and found that the 170 videos in the Asian women category had much less aggression, and less objectification than other categories, but that the performers also had less agency in their scenes. In 2019, Shor and Golriz looked at a sample of 172 videos from Pornhub, and they found that the 25+ videos in the Asian/Japanese category had considerably more aggression than those of other categories. Miller & McBain and Rothman deem that findings of the depictions of Asian women and race in pornography aren't consistent or comprehensive.
See also
- Amejo
- Asian Babes – UK pornographic magazine
- Asian Fever – U.S. pornographic magazine
- Stereotypes of East Asians in the United States § Women
- Ethnic pornography
- Japanophilia
- Miscegenation
- Orientalism
- Potato queen
- Race and sexuality
- Rice queen
- Sarong party girl
- Sexualization and sexual exploitation in K-pop
- Yellow cab
Citations
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- King, Ritchie (20 November 2013). "The uncomfortable racial preferences revealed by online dating". Quartz. Retrieved 30 March 2014.
- ^ Ren, Yuan (July 2014). "'Yellow fever' fetish: Why do so many white men want to date a Chinese woman?".
- ^ S. Chou, Rosalind (5 January 2015). Asian American Sexual Politics: The Construction of Race, Gender, and Sexuality. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 65. ISBN 9781442209251.
- Ashoka Bandarage (1998). "Women and capitalist development in Sri Lanka, 1977-87". Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars. 20 (2): 73–74. doi:10.1080/14672715.1988.10404449.
- ^ Gouda, Frances (2008). Dutch Culture Overseas: Colonial Practice in the Netherlands Indies, 1900–1942. Equinox Publishing. p. 167. ISBN 978-979-3780-62-7.
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- ^ Zheng 2016
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...the first Japanese, the first Asian, and, in more recent American terminology, the first woman of color to win the Miss Universe contest...
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The perception that White faces are more masculine than Asian faces provides support for Lewis' (2012) hypothesis that interracial marriage can be explained by differences in sexual dimorphism and thus advances our understanding of the gender asymmetries in interracial marriage.
- Burke, Darren; Nolan, Caroline; Hayward, William Gordon; Russell, Robert; Sulikowski, Danielle (1 October 2013). "Is There an Own-Race Preference in Attractiveness?". Evolutionary Psychology. 11 (4): 855–872. doi:10.1177/147470491301100410. ISSN 1474-7049. PMC 10481032. PMID 23948346.
- Belletti, N. E., Wade, T. J. (1 January 2008). "Racial characteristics and female facial attractiveness perception among United States university students". Racism in the 21st Century. pp. 93–124. doi:10.1007/978-0-387-79098-5_6. ISBN 978-0-387-79097-8.
- Zheng 2016, p. 406: "It is this double feminization that increases the sexual capital of Asian women but not that of Asian men, a fact perfectly borne out in the oft-noted greater number of relationships between Asian women and White men compared to the number of Asian men in relationships with White women (e.g., Feliciano, Robnett, and Komaie 2009), in attractiveness ratings that rank Asians highest among women but lowest among men (Lewis 2012), and in the greater representation of Asian women compared to Asian men in popular media (Schug et al. 2015). This cross-disciplinary body of work supports the claim that it would be utterly unrealistic to deny that lengthy exposure to a culture historically saturated with sexualized stereotypes of Asian women contributes to an individual’s sexually preferring them, even if that contribution is not obvious or accessible to introspection."
- Pham, Elise (1 April 2021). "Here's how pop culture has perpetuated harmful stereotypes of Asian women". TODAY.com. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
- Fang, Janet. "The Deadly Consequences of Hypersexualizing Asian Women". Scientific American. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
- ^ Eng, Phoebe (2000). Warrior Lessons: An Asian American Woman's Journey Into Power. Atria Books. pp. 127–128. ISBN 978-0-671-00958-8. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
Not all of us agree, for instance, that the current trend of "Asian fetish" is bad. In fact, for some of us, the new visibility of Asian women, even though stereotyped, can actually be liberating. As Melissa de la Cruz wrote... "I find something deliciously wicked and liberating about it...In one breath it banishes the image of the asexual, four-eyed, Asian superbrain forever, replacing it with a certain prurient attractiveness reserved only for femmes fatales. Asian fetish? Where do I sign on?"
- ^ Chen, Vivienne (9 September 2012). "So, He Likes You Because You're Asian". HuffPost. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
- ^ Kwan, SanSan (Winter 2002). "Scratching the Lotus Blossom Itch". Tessera. 31: 41–48.
- Zheng 2016, p. 405: "Even worse, stereotypes about Asian women render them particularly vulnerable to sexual harassment and violence by men who target them on that basis (Cho 1997; Lee 1996; Patel 2009; Park 2012; Woan 2007). There is thus ample reason to be morally concerned about sexualized racial stereotypes of Asian women."
- Woan 2008, p. 275: "The history of Western imperialism in Asia and its lingering effects present the greatest source of inequality for diasporic Asian women today. White sexual imperialism, through rape and war, created the hyper-sexualized stereotype of the Asian woman. This stereotype in turn fostered the over-prevalence of Asian women in pornography, the mail-order bride phenomenon, the Asian fetish syndrome, and worst of all, sexual violence against Asian women."
- Forbes, Yang & Lim 2023, p. 2: "The racialized sexual objectification of Asian women is reinforced by the alarming rates of sex trafficking of Asian women to the U.S. and contributes to the other types of racialized and gendered violence experienced by Asian American women, such as intimate partner violence and sexual assault. The murder of six Asian female massage parlor workers in Atlanta in 2021 was a devastating reminder that these intersectional stereotypes exist to empower white men to “eliminate the temptation” of Asian women’s bodies."
- Fang 2021: "It was such a struggle even to get the shooting recognized as race related. Six of the people he killed were women of Asian descent, yet a sheriff’s deputy with a history of anti-Asian Facebook posts told us that there was no evidence the murders were racially motivated—that the shooter, who described himself as a sex addict, had been having a “bad day.” Lots of other white men, including some of my husband’s journalism colleagues, were quick to comment that we shouldn’t jump to conclusions. Well, that’s bullshit. Even for people who did recognize the shootings as an act of racism, I had to explain to them that it’s not just racism. It’s a racialized misogyny that’s very, very specific to Asian women."
- Zheng, Robin (2022). Earp, B.D.; Chambers, Claire; Watson, Lori (eds.). The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Sex and Sexuality. Routledge Handbooks in Philosophy. Taylor & Francis. p. 331. ISBN 978-1-000-58202-4. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
But the targets of racial fetish can also exploit this erotic capital to their own economic advantage, as in the trope of Singaporean "Sarong Party Girls", who deliberately chase after white men (Hudson 2015)..."
- Grabe, Shelly; Hyde, Janet Shibley (July 2006). "Ethnicity and body dissatisfaction among women in the United States: A meta-analysis". Psychological Bulletin. 132 (4): 622–640. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.132.4.622. ISSN 0033-2909. PMID 16822170. "For example, several researchers have reported that White women are significantly more dissatisfied with their bodies than are their Asian American counterparts (e.g., Akan & Grilo, 1995; Franzoi &Chang, 2002; Mintz & Kashubeck, 1999; Tylka, 2004), whereas others have reported comparable levels of dissatisfaction between the two groups (e.g., Arriaza & Mann, 2001; Cash, Melnyk, &Hrabosky, 2004; Robinson et al., 1996; Siegel, 2002)."
- ^ Nemoto, Kumiko (2009). Racing Romance: Love, Power, and Desire among Asian American/White Couples. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813548524.
- ^ Woan 2008
- Martin, Michel (22 June 2012). "For One Man, She Had to be Pretty and Asian". NPR.
- ^ Kim, Bitna (April 2011). "Asian Female and Caucasian Male Couples: Exploring the Attraction". Pastoral Psychology. 60 (2): 233–244. doi:10.1007/s11089-010-0312-9. S2CID 143478574.
- Yiamyut Sutthichaya (28 July 2015). "New trend of young, educated Thai women with farang husbands emerges: researcher". Prachatai English.
- "Human Rights Briefs: Women in Sri Lanka". Refworld. UNHCR. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
- Reeves, Peter (2014). The Encyclopedia of the Sri Lankan Diaspora. Editions Didier Millet. p. 157. ISBN 9789814260831.
- Lin Lean Lim; Nana Oishi (February 1996). International Labour Migration of Asian Women: Distinctive Characteristics and Policy Concerns (PDF) (Report). Geneva: International Labour Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 August 2017. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
- Villapando, Venny (2000). "The Business of Selling Mail Order Brides". In Plott, Michelle; Umansky, Lauri (eds.). Making Sense of Women's Lives: An Introduction to Women's Studies. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 182. ISBN 9780939693535.
- Adrienne Millbank (4 November 1992). Sponsorship of Spouses and Fiancees into Australia (PDF) (Report). Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia: Parliamentary Research Service. ISSN 1037-2938.
- Hall, Michael C.; Ryan, Chris (2001), "Paradigms of sex tourism", Sex Tourism, Routledge, doi:10.4324/9780203991763-7, ISBN 978-0-203-99176-3, retrieved 10 March 2024
- "'The women who sold their daughters into sex slavery". www.cnn.com. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
- Kotthoff, Helga; Spencer-Oatey, Helen (1 January 2007). Handbook of Intercultural Communication. Walter de Gruyter. p. 345. ISBN 9783110198584. Retrieved 21 August 2017 – via Google Books.
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- Hoang, Kimberly Kay (2015). Dealing in desire: Asian ascendancy, Western decline, and the hidden currencies of global sex work. Oakland, California: University of California Press. p. 192. ISBN 9780520960688.
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- "A cloud over Bali's beautiful beaches". Los Angeles Times. 1 July 2010. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
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- "How the Internet Reevaluated the Swipeability of East Asian Men". Teen Vogue. 22 November 2023. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
- "The Rise of K-Pop and the Fetishization of Korean Men – Affinity Magazine". Retrieved 10 March 2024.
This is not some sort of "yellow fever" or "koreaboo" thing nor any other misnomer given to fetishization. This is the glorification and the demeaning treatment of Korean men and must be chided.
- ^ Ho, F.; Mullen, B.V. (2008). Afro Asia: Revolutionary Political and Cultural Connections Between African Americans and Asian Americans. Duke University Press. p. 301. ISBN 978-0-8223-4281-6. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
Mirroring the larger white mainstream culture, some practitioners of hip hop have borrowed liberally from Asian culture, or have borrowed from the white mainstream's appropriation of Asian culture. The group 2 Live Crew sampled the Vietnamese woman from Full Metal Jacket saying me love you long time. Rappers sport kanji tattoos, sample Asian music, wear Asian clothes, brag about being accepted in Japan, brag about all the Japanese women they've slept with, admit fetishes for Asian women, and put Asian models in their videos.
- Sciullo, N.J. (2018). Communicating Hip-Hop: How Hip-Hop Culture Shapes Popular Culture. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 48. ISBN 979-8-216-06351-3. Retrieved 12 January 2024.
The woman of color as whore was easily transplanted onto Latina women and is egregiously represented in the tropes of the Jezebel and the Asian school girl.
- Lane, J. (2007). Under the Boards: The Cultural Revolution in Basketball. Book collections on Project MUSE. University of Nebraska Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-8032-0755-4. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
Hip-hop has also changed in recent years. Although still very popular with white kids today, it's no longer the exclusive means to, or definition of, cool. The shift has come largely because hip-hop is no longer a singular force: it has integrated with Asian cool (there is an infatuation with Asian women in rap videos; Asian-themed hip-hop music videos and kung-fu/hip-hop action movies abound); )
- Margallo, A.N. (2005). Build Or Perish!: People Power Democracy Liberating America's First Empire : Red's Book. University of Santo Tomas Publishing House. p. 65. ISBN 978-1-4116-0541-1.
In rap music videos, Asian women are seen as sexual objects as they dance...
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- Tran, Marenda (2010). Relationship among adherence to Asian values, sociocultural attitudes toward appearance, and body objectification in Asian American women (Thesis).
- Parmar, Pratihba (2003). "Hateful Contraries: Media Images of Asian Women". In Jones, Amelia (ed.). The Feminism and Visual Culture Reader. Psychology Press. p. 290. ISBN 9780415267052.
- Tajima, Renee E. (1989). "Lotus Blossoms Don't Bleed: Images of Asian Women" (PDF). In Asian Women United of California (ed.). Making Waves: An Anthology of Writings By and About Asian American Women. Boston: Beacon Press.
- Dickson, EJ (31 March 2021), Asian porn performers are sick of being fetishized in racist roles
- Dickson, EJ (20 May 2014), Porn Star Asa Akira takes us inside her new book, 'Insatiable'
- Tan, Mika (17 May 2016) . "Mika Tan (Myspace blog)" – via Adult FYI. Also archived here.
- ^ Zheng, R. (25 May 2017). "Race and Pornography: The Dilemma of the (Un)Desirable". In Mikkola M (ed.). Beyond Speech: Pornography and Analytic Feminist Philosophy Beyond Speech: Pornography and Analytic Feminist Philosophy. pp. 189–193. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190257910.003.0009.
- Perry, S. L., Schleifer, C. (15 December 2017). "Race and Trends in Pornography Viewership, 1973–2016: Examining the moderating roles of gender and religion". The Journal of Sex Research. 56 (1): 62–73. doi:10.1080/00224499.2017.1404959. PMID 29244541.
- Gossett, Jennifer Lynn; Byrne, Sarah (2002). ""Click Here": A Content Analysis of Internet Rape Sites". Gender and Society. 16 (5): 698. doi:10.1177/089124302236992. ISSN 0891-2432. JSTOR 3081955. S2CID 39506826. "In contrast to the invisible perpetrator, race/ethnicity is of paramount importance in constructing the image of the victim. In our sample, 34 of the images (pictures that are clear and in which the race can be identified) depicted Asian women. Eleven of the sites advertise Asian women in their text through words such as Asian, Japanese, and Chinese. Nearly half (15) of the sites either a text reference to Asian women or an image of an Asian woman. In contrast, no images of Black women being raped were found, although one link to a site that advertises "Black Gang Rape," which is ambiguous as to the victims or the perpetrators are Black. Twenty-four images of white women were found among those where race could be identified. This probably understates the number of images of white women in our sample because no sites specifically advertised white women. One possible exception is a site that offered images of blondes, which is likely to be an advertisement for whites. Only one site has a specific reference to Hispanic women in its text, and no sites identify women as Native American or Indian."
- Forbes, Yang & Lim 2023, p. 2: Disparaging Asian women to images of subservience and hypersexuality is not only represented in mainstream media but it permeates the pornography world. A content analysis found that Asian women are the most represented female victims within violent pornography and rape websites (30).
- Woan 2008, p. 292: "Many scholars warn that race-specific pornography contributes to race-specific sexual violence. Since the overwhelming majority of violent pornography features Asian women in particular, it follows that Asian women are at even greater risk of sexual violence due to their role in violent pornography. Helen Zia, a noted social activist, suggests a direct connection between racial-sexual stereotyped pornography and actual violence against Asian women. Additionally, Kandice Chuh argues that 'because Asian/American women are depicted as always consenting, they cannot be raped in the eyes of the law.'"
- Zhou, Yanyan; Paul, Bryant (16 July 2016). "Lotus Blossom or Dragon Lady: A Content Analysis of "Asian Women" Online Pornography". Sexuality & Culture. 20 (4): 1083–1100. doi:10.1007/s12119-016-9375-9. ISSN 1095-5143.
- Shor, Eran; Golriz, Golshan (5 September 2018). "Gender, Race, and Aggression in Mainstream Pornography". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 48 (3): 739–751. doi:10.1007/s10508-018-1304-6. ISSN 0004-0002. PMID 30187150.
- Miller, Dan J.; McBain, Kerry Anne (3 April 2022). "The Content of Contemporary, Mainstream Pornography: A Literature Review of Content Analytic Studies" (PDF). American Journal of Sexuality Education. 17 (2): 219–256. doi:10.1080/15546128.2021.2019648.
- Rothman, Emily F. (2021). Pornography and public health. New York: Oxford university press. ISBN 9780190075477.
References
- Fang, Janet (19 April 2021). "The Deadly Consequences of Hypersexualizing Asian Women". Scientific American. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
- Forbes, Nicola; Yang, Lauren C.; Lim, Sahnah (27 February 2023). "Intersectional discrimination and its impact on Asian American women's mental health: A mixed-methods scoping review". Frontiers in Public Health. 11. doi:10.3389/fpubh.2023.993396. PMC 10008964. PMID 36923035.
- "Racial Violence against Asian Americans". Harvard Law Review. 106 (8). The Harvard Law Review Association: 1926–43. June 1993. doi:10.2307/1341790. JSTOR 1341790.
- Woan, Sunny (March 2008). "White Sexual Imperialism: A Theory of Asian Feminist Jurisprudence". Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice. 14 (2): 2, 19. ISSN 1535-0843.
- Zheng, Robin (2016). "Why Yellow Fever Isn't Flattering: A Case against Racial Fetishes" (PDF). Journal of the American Philosophical Association. 2 (3): 400–419. doi:10.1017/apa.2016.25.
Further reading
- Ariely, Dan; Hitsch, Gunter J.; Hortacsu, Ali (2006). "What Makes You Click? — Mate Preferences and Matching Outcomes in Online Dating". MIT Sloan Research Paper No. 4603-06. SSRN 895442.
- Mills, Jon K.; Daly, Jennifer; Longmore, Amy; Kilbridge, Gina (1995). "A Note on Family Acceptance Involving Interracial Friendships and Romantic Relationships". The Journal of Psychology. 129 (3): 349–51. doi:10.1080/00223980.1995.9914971.
- Yang, Grace (22 May 2020). "Femininity and Dateability: A Look at the Perception of Asian Faces". sc.edu.
- Mikkola, M. (2017). Beyond Speech: Pornography and Analytic Feminist Philosophy. Studies in feminist philosophy. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-025791-0. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
- S. Chou, Rosalind (5 January 2015). Asian American Sexual Politics: The Construction of Race, Gender, and Sexuality. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 65. ISBN 9781442209251.
External links
- Seeking Asian Female − a documentary by Debbie Lum (official website)
- Seeking Asian Female page at PBS Independent Lens
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