Model Minority
Model Minority
BIBLIOGRAPHY
On January 9, 1966, sociologist William Petersen published “Success Story: Japanese American Style” in the New York Times Magazine. Petersen asserted that by dint of their cultural resilience, Japanese Americans had saved themselves from the fate of “problem minorities.” A few months later, US News and World Report weighed in with an article about Chinese Americans entitled “Success Story of One Minority in the US” (December 26, 1966). This latter article opened with an explicit comparison between different minority groups: “At a time when it is being proposed that hundreds of billions be spent to uplift Negroes and other minorities, the nation's 300,000 Chinese Americans are moving ahead on their own.” As with Petersen's article, this one pointed to the importance of family values and Chinese cultural traditions, for “[s]till being taught in Chinatown is the old idea that people should depend on their own efforts—not a welfare check—in order to reach America's ‘Promised Land.’” In 1971 Newsweek published “Success Story: Outwhiting the Whites” (June 21), which called to task not only non-Asian minorities, but also white Americans for their failure to keep up with Asian immigrants into the United States, whose cultural traditions more closely matched those that had historically pushed Northwestern Europe into world dominance. Not for nothing did Fortune label Asian Americans a “Super Minority” (November 1986).
In the century that preceded Petersen's article little augured the birth of the “model minority” stereotype. White supremacists routinely reviled Asians, who were seen alternatively as deviant (opium smokers and sexual predators) or as coolies (who would lower the wages of white Free Labor). In sum, as Lothrop Stoddard, the author of The Rising Tide of Color against White Supremacy, put it in 1920, the “obviously dangerous Oriental” had to be barred from entry into the United States because Asians posed “the greatest threat to Western Civilization and the White Race.” This view was held not only by white supremacist elites, it was also the position of the leading trade union association (the American Federation of Labor or AFL) and its leader (Samuel Gompers). In 1882 the U.S. Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, which was defended in 1902 by Gompers in a coauthored book, Some Reasons for Chinese Exclusion: Meat vs. Rice; American Manhood against Asiatic Coolieism: Which Shall Survive? Originally published by the AFL, the book was republished a few years later by the Asiatic Exclusion League. In 1905, at its 25th Annual Convention, the AFL argued that the “American workingman” had enough to deal with “without being required to meet the enervating, killing, underselling and under-living competition of that nerveless, wantless people, the Chinese.” Such being the historical attitude toward the Chinese and Japanese, it is not a surprise that both peoples faced immense immigration restrictions after 1924 and that the latter were interned during World War II. From the birth of the American Republic to 1966, Asia's people represented a Yellow Peril, needed for its labor, but reviled.
What changed, then, in the mid-1960s? Between 1964 and 1965, the U.S. Congress passed three central pieces of legislation. After a century-long struggle, the civil rights movement achieved partial victories with the passage of the Civil Rights Act (1964) and the Voting Rights Act (1965). Both laws cut down Jim Crow segregation, but neither promised the fullness of freedom demanded by the movement. In his important Report on the Black Family (1965), President Johnson's assistant Daniel Patrick Moynihan registered the manner in which the movement digested its victory. Quoting the sociologist and Moynihan associate Nathan Glazer, the report asserted that the “demand for economic equality is now not the demand for equal opportunities for the equally qualified; it is now the demand for equality of economic results.” Rather than simply seeking equality of opportunity, the disenfranchised had begun to demand “equality of results, of outcomes.” A move in this direction threatened to undermine the hierarchy of class and the justification for its persistence in a liberal democracy. It would inevitably lead to uncomfortable questions: What makes some rich families remain rich, and why is it that the bulk of rich families are also white?
The third Congressional bill, the Immigration Act of 1965, enabled the emergence of a novel theory of persistent inequality. The U.S. Congress reversed the prohibitions against Asian immigration, and now welcomed thousands of people who had received advanced technical training in places such as India and China. The “state selection” of the 1965 Act that allowed only highly educated migrants to enter the country provoked a reconsideration of Asians on “natural selection” lines: If it was state policy that transformed the demography of Asian America, it was a stereotype of their culture that was used to account for their success. The new “model minority,” the Asians, became a useful bludgeon against the “problem minorities.” Inequalities within the Asian American community and racism faced by Asians disappeared from the frame of reference, just as the putative recalcitrance of Latinos and blacks became part of the Asian American story. In this way the myth of the “model minority” aided the perpetuation of racism in the post-civil rights era.
Asians were not the only ones represented as a “model minority.” In December 1964 Nathan Glazer published an essay in Commentary entitled “Negroes and Jews: The New Challenge to Pluralism.” Noting the “shift of Negro demands from abstract equality to group consideration, from color-blind to color-conscious,” Glazer argued that the new demands of the civil rights movement are anathema not only to American values, but also to “model minorities” like the American Jews. Long reviled by the U.S. power structure, Jews, like Asians, became acceptable as beneficiaries of the post–civil rights form of racism that lifted up the “model minorities” as a weapon against the “problem minorities.” When conflict over community schools erupted in New York City in 1967, the concept of the exemplary Jewish American was used in much the same way as notions of the Asian model minority would later be used. Black and Puerto Rican students demanded to be taught not only by “white” teachers, but also by black and Puerto Rican teachers. As it turned out the “white” teachers in Ocean Hill-Brownsville were Jewish Americans, who in turn became pawns in a reconfiguration of Jewish liberalism that saw it shift toward neoconservatism.
In his 1964 article, Glazer argued that Jewish Americans benefit as the “model minority” because their interests “coincide with the new rational approaches to the distribution of rewards.” In other words, so long as educational institutions are equally endowed, justice can be achieved through a color-blind system based on merit. Those minorities that can do well in such a system, because of family cultures that promote educational achievement, are model. In this conception, all historical advantages and disadvantages (such as those derived from immigration policy) are ignored.
Three ideological streams work together to absolve U.S. society from the perpetuation of inequality: multiculturalism (which promotes bureaucratic diversity and claims to value all “cultures” equally), colorblindness (which promotes individual advancement through merit), and the notion of the “model minority” (which demonstrates that some cultures are superior after all, and it is for this reason that certain “races” succeed in a colorblind merit system). Together these enable the reproduction of inequality and the perpetuation of the American ideology of “fairness” and “justice.” The “model minority” myth, therefore, plays a crucial role in post-civil rights racism.
Of course, the social power of the “model minority” myth was strengthened when upwardly mobile Asians and Jews adopted its tenets to further their own advancement. As opportunities opened up, those with saleable skills and with modest amounts of capital mobilized the constellation of ideas around the myth to gain some leverage over a political economy still shaped by white supremacist cultural expectations. In other words, the myth was largely adopted by upwardly mobile sections of minority groups, who found it valuable in gaining entry into the higher rungs of the class structure. Scholars of those who are not able to ascend the ladder afford us with empirical proof of the fallacy of the model minority myth. They also demonstrate the ways in which the myth occludes the existence of working class Asians and Jews (Stacey J. Lee 1996). The myth also prevents us from fully grasping the interaction between Asian and Jewish small merchants and the African American and Latino working poor (Jennifer Lee 2002; Kim 2000; Prashad 2001).
SEE ALSO African Americans; Assimilation; Civil Rights Movement, U.S.; Equal Opportunity; Equality; Glazer, Nathan; Hierarchy; Immigration; Jews; Jingoism; Migration; Minorities; Mobility; Mobility, Lateral; Moynihan Report; Moynihan, Daniel Patrick; Multiculturalism; Nativism; Orientalism; Race-Blind Policies; Racism; Stereotypes; Stratification
Brodkin, Karen. 1998. How Jews Became White Folks and What That Says about Race in America. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Cho, Sumi K. 1997. Converging Stereotypes in Racialized Sexual Harassment: Where the Model Minority Meets Suzie Wong. In Critical Race Feminism: A Reader, ed. Adrien Katherine Wing, 203–220. New York: New York University Press.
Fong, Timothy P. 1998. The Contemporary Asian American Experience: Beyond the Model Minority Myth. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Kim, Claire Jean. 2000. Bitter Fruit: The Politics of Black-Korean Conflict in New York City. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Lee, Jennifer. 2002. Civility in the City: Blacks, Jews, and Koreans in Urban America. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Lee, Robert G. 1999. Orientals: Asian Americans in Popular Culture. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Lee, Stacey J. 1996. Unraveling the “Model Minority” Stereotype: Listening to Asian American Youth. New York: Teachers College Press.
Lowe, Lisa. 1996. Immigrant Acts: On Asian American Cultural Politics. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Prashad, Vijay. 2000. Karma of Brown Folk. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Prashad, Vijay. 2001. Everybody Was Kung Fu Fighting: Afro-Asian Connections and the Myth of Cultural Purity. Boston: Beacon Press.
Vijay Prashad
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CHLOROFORM'S EFFECTS A BIG ISSUE AT RAMAHLO TRIAL.(CAPITAL REGION)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 7/12/1993; 700+ words
; ...1831, the organic solvent known as chloroform had a long run as an anesthetic. But...woke up. The treacherous effects of chloroform -- a colorless liquid with a sweet...accused of killing his wife by placing a chloroform-drenched tissue over her nose and...
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Chronic Toxicity of Chloroform to Japanese Medaka Fish.
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Chloroform in alveolar air of individuals attending indoor swimming pools.
Magazine article from: Archives of Environmental Health; 7/1/1993; ; 700+ words
; ...compounds are possible, only four (chloroform, bromodichloromethane, dibromochloromethane...bromoform) occur frequently, of which chloroform is always the most represented.[1...Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified chloroform and bromodichloromethane as class 2B...
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Research and Markets: Chinese Markets for Chloroform Reveals Historical Data and Long-Term Forecasts from 2012 Right Up To 2017.
Business Wire; 3/10/2009; 700+ words
; ...addition of the "Chinese Markets for Chloroform" report to their offering. Chinas demand for Chloroform has grown at a fast pace in the past...Taxes, Tariff and Custom Duties * CHLOROFORM INDUSTRY ASSESSMENTS * Chloroform Industry...
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Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 2/15/1992; 700+ words
; ...Power Laboratory was the source of the chloroform allegedly used by North Greenbush Town...in the investigation into where the chloroform came from, according to law enforcement...degree murder. If authorities trace the chloroform to the Knolls plant, they will have...
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Evaluation of the Efficacy of Chloroform Extraction of Amniotic Fluid Bilirubin
Magazine article from: Clinical Chemistry; 11/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...concentration of amniotic bilirubin. Chloroform extraction of bilirubin from amniotic...450^ often relies on studies in which chloroform extraction was not used (3, 4...quartz cuvettes. The use of water or chloroform blanks increased ΔA450 <...
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The relationship between water concentrations and individual uptake of chloroform: a simulation study. (Research).
Magazine article from: Environmental Health Perspectives; 5/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...We simulated the relationship between water chloroform concentrations and chloroform uptake in pregnant women to assess the potential...statistical distributions to swimming pool chloroform concentrations, frequency and duration of...
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Lessons learned from research with chloroform.
Magazine article from: Journal of Environmental Health; 9/1/1994; 700+ words
; ...Toxicology (CIIT) shows that the ability of chloroform to produce liver cancer in mice is secondary...interpretation of animal cancer studies. Chloroform is produced in trace amounts in the...level exposures to this chemical. Chloroform induced liver tumors in female B6C3F1...
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CHLOROFORM MURDERS RARE IN UNITED STATES, PATHOLOGIST SAYS.(Local)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 2/9/1992; 700+ words
; Byline: Joe Mahoney Staff writer Chloroform, the chemical used by North Greenbush...but can be lethal if inhaled. Though chloroform is in widespread use as a solvent in...experts contacted by The Times Union said chloroform poisonings are an extremely rare type...
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Chloroform
Book article from: Medical Discoveries
Chloroform Chloroform is another name for the colorless, dense, liquid chemical compound...nonflammable and has a pleasant odor and a burning, sweet taste. Chloroform is about 40 times as sweet as sugar. Nearly insoluble (unable to...
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chloroform
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
chloroform or trichloromethane , CHCl 3 , volatile, colorless, nonflammable liquid...It dissolves freely in ethanol and ether but does not mix with water. Chloroform is produced by reaction of chlorine with ethanol and by the reduction...
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Organochlorines
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Public Health
...drugs, and solvents. Trichloromethane is chloroform, an anesthetic gas that was discovered in the...the same time and in the same laboratory as chloroform. The toxicity of chloroform and carbon tetrachloride has been well studied...
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Anesthesia
Encyclopedia entry from: UXL Encyclopedia of Science
...operation itself. Nitrous oxide, ether, and chloroform. The gases nitrous oxide, ether, and chloroform were first used as anesthetics in the...all over the United States and Europe. Chloroform was introduced as a surgical anesthetic...
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anaesthesia, general
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to the Body
...year by the pleasanter and more potent chloroform , introduced primarily to relieve the...and again in 1857, to administer chloroform to Queen Victoria in childbirth. Snow...animals the blood level of ether and chloroform required for surgical anaesthesia...
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