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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums“Model Minority” Seems Like a Compliment, but It Does Great Harm
http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2015/10/16/the-effects-of-seeing-asian-americans-as-a-model-minority/model-minority-seems-like-a-compliment-but-it-does-great-harmFor labels that sound so promising in tone, the model minority and Asian advantage stereotypes do nothing but render discrimination against Asian-Americans invisible.
Arguments of Asian cultural superiority often try to validate the model minority label: The success of Asian-Americans in the United States is a tribute to hard work, strong families and passion for education. Positive stereotypes about Asian-Americans are frequently seen as more beneficial than detrimental to the student psyche, in spite of research that these stereotypes harm Asian-American students' mental health and well-being.
The most poignant consequence of the model minority label is its failure to acknowledge socioeconomic and education disparities among the diverse range of communities categorized as Asian-American. Not all ethnic communities under the Asian-American umbrella are advantaged. Southeast Asian-Americans drop out of high school at an alarming rate; nearly 40 percent of Hmong-Americans, 38 percent of Laotian-Americans, and 35 percent of Cambodian-Americans do not finish high school. These Asian-American subgroups, along with Vietnamese-Americans, earn below the national average. Sweeping generalizations of Asian-Americans as the privileged and successful minority cannot replace unnerving disaggregated data that bring truth to the inequalities that many Asian-Americans face daily.
Often in history, Asian-Americans cultural values have been lauded as a way to enable interracial tension. The term model minority seems to have been first coined during the Civil Rights Movement in a 1966 New York Times article entitled Success Story, Japanese American Style. The positive stereotype caught on, influencing articles such as U.S. News and World Reports Success Story of One Minority Group in U.S. in 1968, Newsweeks Success Story: Outwhiting the Whites in 1971, and the Time magazines 1987 cover headlining Those Asian-American Whiz Kids. These sensationalized articles similarly argue: if Asian-Americans can work hard and never complain, why arent other racial groups following suit? Cultural normalization and perpetuation of the model minority label operates as a racial wedge that divides Asian-Americans from communities of color while maintaining white dominance in leadership (i.e. the bamboo ceiling) and politics.
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“Model Minority” Seems Like a Compliment, but It Does Great Harm (Original Post)
gollygee
Oct 2015
OP
KamaAina
(78,249 posts)1. The term "Asian" has no meaning whatsoever in Hawai'i
No one in their right mind would attempt to conflate Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, and most recently Koreans, all of whom have their own distinct histories in the islands.
gollygee
(22,336 posts)2. That's one of the many, many problems of racializing groups of people
Our society has created races, but they work for the benefit of our white supremacist society, and obviously not for the people who are members of those races. They don't necessarily make objective sense.