bluebutton wrote:I am Asian, born and raised in Virginia.
There are two levels on which I'm offended. First, if you look at the linked Chronicle article in the article posted
http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/du ... -criticism, you'll see some pics from the party. It's one thing to have a tasteful Asian themed party, it's a different thing to wear rice paddy hats and sumo thongs. It's not an Asians-are-an-interesting-people-with-aesthetics-to-be-admired attitude. I have Anglo friends at church who wear traditional Asian clothes, but these were sent from a sibling who now lives there and they are RenFaire people. That's kind of their thing. They wear the stuff from times and places they are interested in. It's a very different attitude. Instead the party portrays Asians as these weird people who speak weird and dress funny. At the least, there is an other-ness aspect but arguably, it's just disrespectful.
And the second level of offense comes from this: could the same frat conceive of throwing a black-face, slavery party? Or a holocaust party? Maybe, but to my mind that's less likely. And that offends me too. Between the Chinese Exclusion Act and the Japanese internment, American history has some seriously ugly patches regarding Asian looking people. I, personally, do not want to be tip-toed around the way I feel some do around blacks and Jews. But I'm also sensitive to the fact that people do tip toe around other racial/ethnic groups in a way they do not with Asians. To me that speaks to the ongoing lack of acceptance of Asians as potential Americans in the way that Italians and Germans were once not accepted but today are well within the bounds of "American".
Hope that helps, Tilly. It's actually really hard to offend me. But the boneheadedness of this party was really kind of stunning. I've heard there's this new thing where hipsters can be racist because they're so tolerant it's ironic to be racist. That's the best spin I can put on this.
Bluebutton, thank you for your response it does help. I have a few follow-up questions, they are not meant to criticize or belittle your points, to to point out the inconsistencies with society.
You feel it is disrespectful to wear rice paddy hats and sumo thongs to a party, though both are worn by Asians in Asia, granted the rice paddy hats more so than the sumo thongs. Should we be outraged when at ballgames fans participate in a sumo wrestling match - two people dress up in big sumo suits and "wrestle"? This is done often at Durham Bulls games. Should we be outraged when wearing "toga's" to a toga party? Should we accept toga parties in the realm of themed parties? Is that not disrespectful to Greeks? Should we be outraged that people wear "Hawaiian" clothes to Hawaiian Luaus? What we all know as Hawaiian clothes are in fact not something native Hawaiians wore before the white man landed on the islands. Hawaiian clothes as we know them are a rather recent thing to the islands.
As someone of Irish descent and Catholic, it bothers me that St. Patrick's day is promoted as day to drink beer and get drunk. St. Patrick's day is a holiday in Ireland, or it used to be but it is so secularized that even they don't honor it the same way they used to, to celebrate St. Patrick for a) pushing the snakes out of Ireland (folklore) and b) introducing Christianity to Ireland. I've seen people of a variety races wearing Irish gear on St. Patrick's day, including "Kiss me I'm Irish" pins. To me the Irish now look like drunks and easy. Why is there no outrage there? For a long time the Irish were consider second class here in the states. Often times in the late 19th and early 20th century you would see signs in windows reading "NINA" - no Irish need apply.
I would imagine, though I cannot and should not speak for Mexicans, that they may feel disrespected on Cinco de Mayo day. There are advertisements galore around May 5th to have beer and other alcoholic beverages at your local restaurant to celebrate Cinco de Mayo. Do those guzzling down said drinks even know the significance of Cinco de Mayo?
I feel we as a society are selective with our outrage over stereotypes.
BTW, I find the term Anglo offensive as an Anglo is English. The English invaded Ireland, among other countries, and beat the natives into submission, perhaps not literally. For someone from Ireland to be called Anglo could be insulting. I live with it as there are more important things in my mind I'd rather spend my time "fighting." Not trying to imply that anyone else shouldn't take up the charge to break stereotypes.