Preview

Examples Of Asian American Stereotypes

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1129 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Examples Of Asian American Stereotypes
Nick Jump
Ms. Pringle
1310 1:00
17 October 2005

Stereotypes play a significant role in the lives of many individuals. Stereotypes can be hurtful and they can be helpful. Eric Liu combats Asian stereotypes and his own thoughts of inferiority with a conscious strategy of assimilation that leads to further the spread of Asian American stereotypes and the loss of his own individuality. When someone finds him or herself in an unfamiliar place, they tries to adapt to the surroundings by blending in. Liu believes that the way to "make it" in America is to "achieve whiteness" (148). Liu believes to be successful one must "[bleach] out the marks of a darker, dirtier past" and assimilate (148). When Eric Liu assimilated he was considered
…show more content…
The strategy that Liu used to get away from the Asian American stereotype was by acting completely being to total opposite of what Asians are known for. Asians are stereotypically know for being very good at math and science, so Liu decided that he would study history. He lifted weights and went to the Marine officer candidate school to prove that he was not lacking any physical or metal strength. However, Liu states that by "working so to defy stereotypes, I became a slave to it. For to act self-consciously against Asian ‘tendencies' is not to break loose from the cage of myth and legend; it is to turn the very key that locks you inside" (151). By defying Asian American stereotypes Liu was feeding the stereotype of the typical Asian, waspy Yale student. In collage Liu used what he had absorbed and learned growing up about the white culture to survive and …show more content…
If a football player is trying out for a team and he knows he is not very good at caching the ball, the player will work extra hard to have a speed advantage over the other players so that he can still draw the attention of the coaches. Liu not only believed that he was inferior to whites but that he deficient to every race: "I believed that I lacked the connections, the wealth, the experience, the sophistication that so many of my classmates seemed to have"(151). Liu saw the power that whites have in this country, and as Liu began to blend into white, middle-class America, he saw that "[he] was actually beginning to ‘make it'." Liu's acceptance to Yale led to many other privileged experiences. "Extracurriculars opened the door to an alumni internship, which brought [him] to Capital Hill, which led to a job and a life in Washington after commencement" (151). By almost any standards of American society, Liu would be considered elite and one of the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    And yet it is as though Liu never really had to assimilate because when he was born his parents were not traditional to begin with. We are able to see that Liu has accepted his form of assimilation because he refers to himself as a “banana.” “Banana” being the term that Asian’s use to describe other Asian’s that “have moved away from the periphery and toward the center of American life.” By moving to the center of American life I believe that Asians mean that it is an Asian who has willingly given up their cultural traditions to take on that of a western life. Liu believes that he his Asian culture in some way holds him back from fitting into the dominant society and culture which is why he is willing to change. We see an example of this during his teenage years as he try’s to do his hair to fit in with what was trending at the time, it results in Liu shaving his hair off. In having shaved his hair he literally loses part of the Asianness in him. He shaved his hair because to him his hair was only a reminder that it would not allow him to fir into the “cool” crowd because it would never allow him too. We see that Liu changes once more to his environment when he goes off to college. He does not fully avoid having Asian friends, but he sets certain ground rules for himself. One of the ground rules that he sets for himself is that he would not join any Asian only clubs. Liu tells his…

    • 1180 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Stereotypes can be a powerful means of affecting the outlook of people we percieve in some cases it can be good or it can be good. This article gives an example of an Asian American woman it states that she could possess two identities that could be…

    • 367 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Stereotype: a widely held but fixed and oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing. The mythology of stereotypes have long been related with negative connotations towards individuals and their race. These stereotypes cause hate, embarrassment, and disgrace towards one’s own self and heritage. Often stereotypes are dismembered from literature to avoid a negative backlash; however, in Gene Yang’s comic American Born Chinese the author provides an offensive character as a symbol to combat stereotypes. This character by the name of Chin-kee is packaged as “every Chinese stereotype” from appearance, being extremely school oriented, and knowing Kung-Fu. Yet, this character portrayed in Yang’s…

    • 2054 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    At first sight these two pictures look extremely different, but as one deeply analyzes both of them their similarities are exposed.…

    • 689 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    If you are Hispanic, you may have heard comments such as, “Wow, you speak so well… You are not like them… You are really smart… OR You are different and they will really like you.” You might even be asked repeatedly where you are from if your first answer is a city or state in the U.S. The take away messages from these simple statements are clear for many of us. You are not acting like those Hispanics who don’t quite behave like the “norm” – which essentially is referring to White Anglo-American. After experiencing a microaggression, you might wonder, “Were are they giving me a compliment or telling me that people from my culture are less than” or “Were they really curious about where I live or were they telling me that I don’t belong – that…

    • 195 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Like past immigrants who came from Germany, Ireland and other places around the world. Chinese people in America faced many challenges when migrating. They felt like outcasts. Some experiences for the Chinese were in racist encounters and the feeling the way that Nazli Kibra felt when she came to America. She had always thought of herself as an American when she thought of herself as “the American kid on the block,” (Source F) until she went to school and she felt outcast and that “Whites think they own the world and the rest of us are just here for them.” (Source F) They felt as though they did not fit in in America. For Kibra, the Americans that she noticed at her school were people who were “VERY white, very wealthy. These kids owned sports cars and went to Rio for the weekend.”…

    • 461 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Examples Of Stereotyping

    • 1026 Words
    • 5 Pages

    What image do you see when you hear the word homeless? I use to think of words like dirty, lonely, and also needy. The true definition of homeless is without a home, and therefore typically living on the streets. Stereotyping is a common thought through our human minds, which means oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing. I learned this summer on my mission trip to Madison, Wisconsin, that homeless people are not what we think they are.…

    • 1026 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Asian-American Stereotypes

    • 1599 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Asian American meta-stereotypes carry varying connotations of respect as well as resentment. Kwan’s and Chu’s study Asian American meta-stereotypes have two effects: “Relative Valorization” and “Civic Ostracism”. The purpose of “Relative Valorization” is to give a high social position to Asian Americans relative to other ethnic minorities, but still in a lower social position than European Americans. This seems positive, since now Asian Americans are seen as more equal to European Americans. However, this assumption is not an in depth analysis of the effect on the Asian-American community. In fact, Relative Valorization actually has a deeper negative effect. Relative Valorization insinuates that Asian Americans are still not equal to European Americans, but also higher than other ethnic minorities, creating a unique position where Asian Americans are unable to relate to neither European Americans nor other ethnic minorities. This position is further exacerbated with “Civic Ostracism”, in which Asian Americans are perpetually seen as different and foreign. Jean Wing claims, in her journal, Beyond Black and White: The Model Minority Myth and the Invisibility of Asian American Students, that the Model Minority Myth is merely a tool in order…

    • 1599 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Japanese Stereotypes

    • 1320 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In the spring of 1942, we in the United States placed some 110,000 persons of Japanese descent in protective custody. Two out of every three of these were American citizens by birth; one-third were aliens forbidden by law to be citizens. Included were three generations: Issei, or first-generation immigrants (aliens); Nisei, or second-generation (American-born citizens); and Sansei, or third-generation (American-born children of American-born parents).…

    • 1320 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    When you think of Asians-Americans in school, what are the things that come to the mind? They know math well? They are intelligent? They can help you with your homework? Well there are many stereotypes of Asians however the point is that Asians- Americans students are succeeding in school simply because it has something to do with the way they were raised and not the way they were born or even living up to their stereotypes. Asians- Americans put forth effort into their schoolwork and take education seriously. In reality no race is more intelligent than the other despite of what the public believes. Their parents brought them up to be respectable and obey their parents while the average America students are more focused on their hanging with…

    • 1295 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Stereotypes of African Americans have been around since slavery. Once media got involved it was able to give society a visual as to how other races portrayed them. With television, it’s becoming more and more vivid of how bad the stereotyping is getting. Now a day’s some writers of these shows and try to hide the racial remarks, while others are blunt with it and receive no type of punishment for their actions. You do have some sitcoms that will shine a positive light on the African American community, but these shows never last long. The gatekeepers do not want to put a positive image in your head they want you feel a certain way so therefore they come up with shows like Family Guy and South Park that…

    • 393 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The people who are the unhappiest in this world are those who care what others think of themselves. From American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang, Jin facial expressions would show him being worried and often thinking. Not caring what others may think of themselves is a choice someone should make to benefit. Before judging a person based on generalizations about a whole race, people need to understand every person is a unique individual. Some of the worst Asian American model minority myths include those that characterize Asian Americans as invariably exceptional students, those that claim that Asian American often become doctors, lawyers, engineers, and pharmacists, and those that say that Asian Americans have language barriers. Stereotypes…

    • 139 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A math teacher has a racial stereotype that Asian students get higher scores than other ethnic students in the math exams. This stereotype can lead to confirmation bias when the teacher remembers Asian students get higher scores and ignore when the other ethnic students get higher scores. This stereotype also can lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy that the teacher may pay more attention on Asian students, therefore Asian students' scores get higher and it confirms the teacher's stereotype.…

    • 78 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    There have always certain stereotypes that came with being Asian. We are the best in our class. We are bad at social interaction. We are karate masters. We are the reason cars crash. Of course, all these expectations are connected — we are good at school mostly because our moms read SAT prep books to us instead of Caillou. This, in turn, ensures that we are poorly socialized and ostracized by our classmates, so we do kung fu to chop away at our loneliness. After honing our skills to master gravity, we start flying from rooftop to rooftop, which eliminates our needs for peasant cars. And thus, we never properly learn how to…

    • 114 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although an Asian American woman identify as both Asian American and woman, they are often told to pick a side when advocating. Much like the identity of a woman, this identity is also sexualized, but at a heightened level because of their Asian American identity. The two main stereotypes are the China Doll/Geisha, submissive and passive, and Dragon Lady, predatory devious. They are seen as exotic and therefore fetishized. Additionally, they are impacted by traditional views that consider men as superior, pressure women to marry, and have high beauty…

    • 515 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays