1. When National Security Concerns Become Unjust - Tech Policy Press
24 mei 2024 · Leaders must mitigate the risks of racial bias and stereotyping when pursuing concerns about national security, says Bridget Chan.
Leaders must mitigate the risks of racial bias and stereotyping when pursuing concerns about national security, says Bridget Chan.
2. The history behind 'Yellow Peril Supports Black Power' and why ...
11 jun 2020 · The slogan originated in the 1960s as a show of solidarity between Asian Americans and African Americans, today some say it falsely equates the struggles of ...
While the slogan originated in the 1960s as a show of solidarity between Asian Americans and African Americans, today some say it falsely equates the struggles of the two communities.
3. The Revival of the Yellow Peril: Culture and Scapegoating During ...
24 jun 2020 · Both Trump's rhetoric and the rise in violence against Chinese and other Asians in the United States reflect persistent ideas of the “Yellow Peril.”
By Gwen D’Arcangelis
4. The New Yellow Peril - YaleGlobal Online
Responding to public fears about job loss, the French government recently announced new measures to prevent the outsourcing of domestic production.
Responding to public fears about job loss, the French government recently announced new measures to prevent the outsourcing of domestic production. Opponents of offshoring, however, overstate its harmful effects, argues French trade specialist Olivier Cattaneo. For instance, in the United States – where outsourcing has become a potent political issue – the trade surplus in information services actually doubled between 1995 and 2002. Outsourcing is not, in fact, a one-sided flow of jobs from rich countries to poorer ones; even those jobs that are relocated overseas are often replaced by new ones at home. Rather than punishing outsourcers, Cattaneo concludes, governments should encourage corporations to domestically re-invest profits, embrace innovation, and foster socially responsible practices. – YaleGlobal
5. Opinion | What used to be called 'the yellow peril' is now 'the China threat'
9 jun 2023 · Surface rationality can be profoundly irrational. That's why, of the ... US Elections Flash Sale. USD1/month for the first year. Ends ...
The paranoia and racism of novelist Jack London greatly mirror those of the anti-China hawks in the Anglo-Saxon sphere today.
6. “Yellow Perils,” Revived: Exploring Racialized Asian/American Affect ...
5 okt 2021 · Specifically, yellow peril is a racial stereotype that generally ... This hashtag has been going viral not only in France, but also ...
The goal of this essay is to explore what kind of hate is produced against Asian bodies in reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic. By centering Asian/American affect and materiality – marginalized voices, narratives, and feelings of Asian/Americans as affective-performative texts, this essay attends to critique the historical continuum of racial discrimination against Asian/Americans (i.e., yellow peril) and advocate for social justice, equality, and inclusion in the U.S. Overall, I argue that Asian/American bodies are both physiologically and ideologically desensitized, dehumanized, and weaponized as the revival of yellow perils over the COVID-19 pandemic. Moreover, this essay highlights the possibility of adding affective and performative lenses in Critical Intercultural Communication research, exploring the politics of Asian/American bodies and the hate discourse as a case study for further academic conversations in Asian/American scholarship in Communication.
7. Model Minority, Yellow Peril: Functions of “Foreignness” in the ...
21 mrt 2021 · The presumption of foreignness has made it easier for Asian Americans to be used as cheap labor; easier to turn them into the yellow peril on an ...
This process is automatic. Your browser will redirect to your requested content shortly.
8. [PDF] Yellow Peril: a legacy or a forgotten past? A content analysis of Chinese ...
The term Yellow Peril can be drawn back to the medieval fears of Genghis Khan ... One of the threats is described as cheap Chinese labor workers that are taking ...
9. Yellow Peril - TV Tropes
He will often be garbed in clothing you'd expect to find in Qing-dynasty China. However, not all examples are necessarily Chinese nationals; on the contrary, ...
This trope is under discussion in the Trope Repair Shop. The Yellow Peril is an "oriental" criminal and/or political mastermind, a character originating in the xenophobic days of the late 19th century, but popular ever since. As an expression of …
See AlsoBxm8 Schedule Pdf
10. The Alien and the Sovereign:Yellow Peril in Pandemic Times
... going to be China. Mississippi's never going to be North Korea.'” The exercise of state power during the pandemic can be summed up as the mass sacrifice of ...
Evergreen Review
11. The "Yellow Peril" - European Media - ieg-ego.eu
15 okt 2015 · ... cheap Chinese workers out-competing their counterparts in North ... can buy, and then the 'Yellow Peril' will be beyond ignoring." ...
As the counterpart to the narrative of European superiority, the fear of Japan and China has had a place in the history of Europe since the 1890s, when the term was adopted from North America. In general, the term 'Yellow Peril' has been analysed as a political and social catchphrase. In this essay, I argue instead that three media events played a crucial role in its emergence and gradual intensification: the Sino-Japanese War of 1894/1895, the Boxer War of 1900/1901 and the Russo-Japanese War of 1904/1905. The legacies of these wars cast a long shadow over the 20th century.
12. "Yellow Peril Supports Black Power" :: Andrews University
16 feb 2024 · During this time in U.S. history, Chinese laborers were being brought to America to replace recently emancipated Black people as a cheap source ...
VOLUME 104
13. Coronavirus fears show how 'model minority' Asian Americans become ...
9 mrt 2020 · Coronavirus fears show how 'model minority' Asian Americans become the 'yellow peril' ... Examples of this can be found throughout history.
While viruses and other pathogens do not discriminate between hosts based on race, ethnicity, nationality or immigration status — stigma and misinformation certainly do.
14. 6 The “Yellow Peril” and the Asia-Pacific War - Oxford Academic
It shows that the discourse of the “yellow peril” can be understood as a process of world-making of “Asian” alterity through ideas of threat and insecurity; it ...
AbstractThis chapter explores the history of racialized threats and fears of Asia in the Western imagination. It shows that the discourse of the “yellow pe
15. Opinion | Fear of 'Yellow Peril' lives on | South China Morning Post
6 mei 2013 · US Elections Flash Sale. USD1/month for the first ... By clicking “Accept”, you agree that cookies can be placed per our Privacy Policy.
Today, 131 years ago, the US Senate passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, the first federal law directly aimed at rejecting entry of an ethnic group, and one of many aimed at the same prejudicial treatment of other Asian ethnic groups. By today's standards, there is no doubt it is racist.
16. Asian Immigration: The "Yellow Peril" - Exhibits - Digital Gallery
The term "Yellow Peril" refers to Western fears that Asians, in particular the Chinese, would invade their lands and disrupt Western values.
The term "Yellow Peril" refers to Western fears that Asians, in particular the Chinese, would invade their lands and disrupt Western values, such as democracy, Christianity, and technological innovation. However, ideas about Western progress at the time also included beliefs that are recognized as problematic today, such as white supremacy and the virtue of colonizing non-Western lands.
17. Return of the Yellow Peril | The Hooded Utilitarian
24 jul 2013 · That in itself might not be so bad – after all, stepping into someone else's shoes is what actors are paid to do, and Butler and Hemsworth ...
The Yellow Peril is an old frienemy of ours. We officially made its acquaintance for the first time at the end of the nineteenth century, when the catchy comic book villain-esque name was coined as a popular term for underpaid Chinese laborers in the United States, playing on the fear that an influx of Asian immigrants would destroy Western civilization and values. The phrase came back swinging roughly half a century later, during World War II. This time, of course, the Yellow Peril was Japanese. The basic story remained the same, though, painting people of color – specifically those of Asian descent – as an inscrutable and exotic threat to the “true” America, otherwise known as white America. And stories, as we know, have consequences. Fear of the Yellow Peril fueled the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, which placed some of the heaviest bans on free immigration in U.S. history. That same brand of fear inspired the internment of more than 100,000 Americans in 1942 – for the great and terrible crime of being born with Japanese ancestry.