Descubra a los Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/es/interviews/clips/1437/

Asian Stereotypes

The stereotyping of people, specifically Japanese Americans, or the Japanese, I think, has played a powerful role in shaping who we are, and what we have become. And what we will be.

When Asians first started coming to the United States, they had discrimination from the outset. Immigrants coming from Asia could not become naturalized. So they were, by law, made foreigners in this country. And the Alien Land Law was passed, which denied land acquisition for, the term was, “Aliens ineligible for citizenship,” which meant Asians. But the word Asians wasn't used.

These laws, and these attitudes, were based on stereotypes that they had of Asians. And those stereotypes were reinforced by the stage plays at that time, by the newspaper cartoons at that time. And as society and the media grew, it became a part of the movies and part of songs stereotyping Asians. Stage plays that stereotyped Asians. And so when internment came down, it was those stereotypes that contributed to the hysteria of getting rid of the Japs from the west coast. During the war time, Chinese played the roles of Japanese. Those stereotypes. Asians rented out our faces to contribute to the maintenance of that stereotype. These stereotypes were created by whites that had no understanding of who we were as people. It was their vision of us, colored by the politics of that time. We contributed our faces to that.

But now things are changing. We have filmmakers now, who are Asian American. Writers. Producers. Directors, who are Asian Americans. As well as actors, who are Asian Americans. We are now telling our story from our perspective, in our voices, with our faces. And the faces are rooted in their genuine experiences. So we've made tremendous progress. We have television series now that depict Asian families. I haven't seen it yet, but I'm looking forward to Fresh Off the Boat. I have a couple of friends on that series. So we're making great progress. We need to now develop what I think are Asian American bankable stars, so that feature films now can be told from our perspective, in our voices.


discriminación relaciones interpersonales medios de comunicación estereotipos

Fecha: February 3, 2015

Zona: California, US

Entrevista: John Esaki, Janice Tanaka

País: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Entrevista

George Hosato Takei nació en Los Ángeles en 1937, hijo de un padre issei, Takekuma Norman Takei, y una madre nisei, Fumiko Emily Nakamura. Tenía tan solo cinco años de edad cuando, tras el bombardeo japonés de Pearl Harbor, su familia fue agrupada junto con otros 120,000 japoneses americanos y enviada a campos de concentración por el gobierno de los Estados Unidos.

Obtuvo su título de bachiller y su maestría en teatro, ambos de la Universidad de California en Los Ángeles y se embarcó en una carrera en el teatro, televisión y cine. En 1966, fue seleccionado para el papel del teniente Hikaru Sulu en la innovadora serie de televisión Star Trek.

Además de su carrera en la actuación, Takei ha colaborado muy activamente en el servicio púbico y comunitario, incluyendo su participación en la junta del Southern California Rapid Transit District (Distrito de Transporte Rápido del Sur de California) y ha sido un miembro activo y altruista del Japanese American National Museum Board of Trustees (Consejo Directivo del Museo Nacional Japonés-Americano) desde el inicio.

Desde que se declaró como gay en el 2005, Takei se ha convertido en un verdadero defensor de los derechos LGBT, hablando extensamente de sus propias experiencias, haciendo que los personajes públicos se responsabilicen por sus comentarios homofóbicos, y sirviendo como portavoz del Human Rights Campaign (Campaña de Derechos Humanos). Takei ha gozado de una nueva ola de popularidad en años recientes gracias al humor contagioso y amigabilidad de su página en Facebook, la cual tiene más de ocho millones de seguidores.

Última actualización en mayo de 2015

Calloway,Terumi Hisamatsu

Discrimination faced in San Francisco (Japanese)

(n. 1937) Novia de guerra de Yokohama 

Hirano,Paulo Issamu

Accepted by Japanese society as I learned more Japanese (Japanese)

(n. 1979) Sansei brasileño reside en Oizumi-machi, Prefectura de Gunma. Administra una oficina de Diseño Gráfico.

Yamamoto,Mia

Comprender el racismo contra los negros en la escuela secundaria

(n. 1943) Abogado transgénero japonés-estadounidense

Yamamoto,Mia

La discriminación racial la preparó para convertirse en la primera abogada litigante transgénero

(n. 1943) Abogado transgénero japonés-estadounidense