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Racist Anti-Tech Hollywood: From Dr. Fu Manchu to AI

ygolo

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Hollywood (synecdoche) is the center of Anti-Asian hate in the US.

I choose this characterization purposefully. Hollywood isn't the most overtly racist part of the US. But it skews in an Asian-Hating direction (with some tokenization).

Hollywood also controls the storytelling of dominant cultural images and affects the pre-conceptions in all walks of life. It affects the ability of Asians to tell their story in all walks of life.

The anti-Tech part comes from the fact that a huge portion of the Asian immigrant community goes into science and technology, especially if English language proficiency, when young, isn't that high.

I am going to start listing now.
 

ygolo

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Long Duk Dong style in Sixteen Candles is still the norm portrayal in Hollywood.

Consider Kevin Ganpoor in Mean Girls.


The only somewhat significant character that is of color is Kevin G. a mathlete who’s of Indian descent. Regardless of his role, he was cast following stereotypes that Indians are very bright making his role chosen with a comedic purpose. “…The joke functions as humor within a specific social context in which it frequently reinforces patterns of social power.“(Crenshaw, 1293) It is quite incredible that in a cast with many leads there still is not equality. All leads being white, attractive, heterosexual characters reinforces that this is what everyone in society should strive to look like.
 
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ygolo

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There are several Asian characters portrayed in the film, Knives Chau, Matthew Patel, Kyle and Ken Katayanagi, while each offer Asian representation, I would not necessarily call it ideal representation.

Knives is a 17 year-old dating Scott a 23 year-old. Some blatant nonchalant pedophilia, but thats the least of our issues while dissecting this movie. Knives’ character is written in such a way that she upholds the fetishization of Asians within media pining after older White men (which we will touch on once again when we discuss Mean Girls). Knives is used to emphasize her Asian identity as “other.” She is a small, docile, doting girlfriend to Scott. Her character does not really evolve past this. Later, she does change into this caricature of a “dragon woman”, a harmful stereotype of the evil, hyper-sexualized Asian villain seen in films from early Hollywood. She assumes this edgier persona in attempts to win Scott back. This only further reinforces her fetishization as she adopts an evil personality, with a coloured streak in her hair emphasizing her exoticness. Knives, of course, specializes in martial arts. Definitely not stereotypical, at all. This transformation occurs to appease Scott’s changing desires, from a quiet school girl to edgier manic pixie dream girl. This reinforces the idea of the fetishization of Asian women serving as a means to please White men’s perception of Asian beauty.

Matthew Patel serves as a means to bolster a stereotype of effeminate Indian men. He is criticized profusely by Ramona for being undesirable. Ramona says she only dated him because he was “the only non-White guy” at her school. This is harmful as it perpetuates the trope of White people dating BIPOC to wash their hands of any alleged racism, or to make themselves seem more immersed within the world of diversity. Essentially as a means to appear as ‘other’. Ramona further dissociates herself from him by saying she was only with him briefly and just kissed him once, hyper-accentuating how unattractive he is. The stereotype that Asian men are undesirable and unmasculine pervades reality. These unflattering depictions can project socially constructed biases that dictate desirability.

Don’t get me started on the Bollywood themed fight scene, its so many levels of wrong and racism mixed up into each other. During this fight sequence, Patel throws fireballs, emphasizing the stereotype of mysticism of Indian men. The musical portion of the fight certainly does not read as an homage to Bollywood. It serves as a means to mock southern Asian culture with its inclusion of an unrealistic Indian accent and poorly choreographed Bollywood dance moves.

The Katayangi twins offer the ridiculous trope of the silent ‘other’, extenuating the “mysterious and dangerous” nature of the ‘other’. The twins are the least fleshed out characters of the film, to the point of one of their key powers being listed as “being Japanese”. To top off excessively diminishing caricature of Japanese men, one of the brothers is depicted wearing a “rising sun” Japanese flag as his shirt. Which, for those of you who may not be aware, is an offensive symbol. It was the symbol of the Japanese Empire from the late 19th-20th century, and was sported during the 2nd World War, representing the years of exploitation and militarism. Overall, not a great move on the costume department.
 

ygolo

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  • Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders have long been misrepresented and underrepresented in the media.
  • A new report by the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, funded by Amazon Studios and UTA Foundation, found that this trend continues as anti-Asian hate comes to the forefront.
  • “Not one API woman has received sole directing credit for a live action top-grossing feature film in the last 13 years,” noted one expert.
 

ygolo

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Closely related to this trope, Raj’s character plays into many of the stereotypes surrounding Indian immigrants: he is portrayed as socially awkward, nerdy, and effeminate. He is unable to talk to women without being drunk, hangs out with a group of other “nerdy” scientists, and as the article “The Raj Prototype” points out, he “likes fru-fru drinks and The Blue Man Group.” While the show started off being written for an American audience, it is now attempting to cater to a more global audience. Despite this, the show fails to give Raj the opportunity for significant character growth, generally focusing on immigrant Indian stereotypes, Raj’s failed relationships with women, and his ignorance of American customs for humor’s sake.
 

ygolo

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Pakistani immigrant Dinesh spectacularly screwed up both a CEO position and a relationship—the entire point of his character is that he'll never be as smart or as savvy as Gilfoyle. (For proof of this, look no further than their tiff on last night's episode, which Gilfoyle won simply by maintaining that he did.) Chinese immigrant Jian-Yang is written as even less smart—his big pitch this season was a collection of eight octopus recipes—and the developer's greatest achievement thus far has been cheating Erlich out of a year's rent by taking advantage of a loophole meant to help the unfortunate. Dinesh and Jian-Yang might be just as brilliant as their counterparts, but Silicon Valley never shows it.
 
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Hollywood (synecdoche) is the center of Anti-Asian hate in the US.

I choose this characterization purposefully. Hollywood isn't the most overtly racist part of the US. But it skews in an Asian-Hating direction (with some tokenization).

Hollywood also controls the storytelling of dominant cultural images and affects the pre-conceptions in all walks of life. It affects the ability of Asians to tell their story in all walks of life.

The anti-Tech part comes from the fact that a huge portion of the Asian immigrant community goes into science and technology, especially if English language proficiency, when young, isn't that high.

I am going to start listing now.
I think this seems like it could be key to what you're getting at:

"He's a master not only of the occult but of Western sciences 'with all the modern technologies at his disposal' – a combination which makes him doubly threatening," says Clegg.

This also preyed on fears of the future in a world of rapidly advancing technology: "We know the power of science, which must be balanced with ethics to be put to good use – but what if science should fall into the wrong hands?"
 

ygolo

My termites win
Joined
Aug 6, 2007
Messages
6,730
I think this seems like it could be key to what you're getting at:

It made it way into the US entertainment industry, and basically every portrayal (outside entertainment with mostly Asian casts, and other token situations) is some form of reation(mostly in the form of assuaging the "yellow peril" going the other direction).

 
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