Yellow Peril Redux: Vitalizing Pre-Existing Racial Conditions with a New Symbol

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Yellow Peril Redux: Vitalizing Pre-Existing Racial Conditions with a New Symbol
Language: English
Authors: Adachi, Nobuko
Source: Educational Research and Development Journal. 2021 24(2):29-51.
Availability: Chinese American Educational Research and Development Association. e-mail: info@caerda.org; Web site: https://www.viethconsulting.com/members/publication/new_waves_home.php
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 23
Publication Date: 2021
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Evaluative
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Racial Discrimination, Violence, Asian Americans, COVID-19, Pandemics, Experience, Racial Attitudes, Stereotypes, Social Problems
ISSN: 1526-8659
Abstract: Racially-motivated verbal and physical assaults toward people of Asian descent in the UnitedStates have escalated substantially in the United States since 2020. However, authorities do notoften view these cases as racially-motivated. I argue that this is a continuation of a long historicaltrend in the United States due to a renewed kind of Yellow Peril fear. I look at the language andmetaphors used by politicians that has revitalized pre-existing discrimination towards the EastAsian Americans, both during the pandemic and previously, and examine how those in authorityhandled these cases. Dissemination of misinformation and false news stories concerning COVIDhas created a new Yellow Peril Redux using new symbolic vocabulary. This has reified, reinforced,and--indeed--legitimated increased prejudice and intolerance against an already marginalizedcommunity.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2022
Accession Number: EJ1334693
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:Racially-motivated verbal and physical assaults toward people of Asian descent in the UnitedStates have escalated substantially in the United States since 2020. However, authorities do notoften view these cases as racially-motivated. I argue that this is a continuation of a long historicaltrend in the United States due to a renewed kind of Yellow Peril fear. I look at the language andmetaphors used by politicians that has revitalized pre-existing discrimination towards the EastAsian Americans, both during the pandemic and previously, and examine how those in authorityhandled these cases. Dissemination of misinformation and false news stories concerning COVIDhas created a new Yellow Peril Redux using new symbolic vocabulary. This has reified, reinforced,and--indeed--legitimated increased prejudice and intolerance against an already marginalizedcommunity.
ISSN:1526-8659