Religion, ‘the Chinese virus,' and perceptions of Asian Americans as a moral and medical menace

M. Borja
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Abstract

This chapter discusses the anti-Asian hate during the COVID-19 pandemic into a broader context and argues that contemporary fear of Asian people as a ‘yellow peril’ draws on longstanding ideas about race, religion, and disease. During the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, Asian Americans found themselves once again contending with yellow peril rhetoric that associated them with disease. In its first month, the Stop AAPI Hate Reporting Center, which created a hate incident reporting system in March 2020, received approximately 1, 500 reports of coronavirus-related hate incidents targeting Asian Americans of all ethnicities and across the country, with twice as many reports coming from women as from men. In contrast to the anti-Asian hate that characterized previous pandemics and crises, Asian Americans in 2020 were comparatively organized and well-resourced. Alarmed by the resurgence of yellow peril discourses and the reports of harassment, discrimination, and violence, Asian Americans responded creatively and forcefully. © 2022 selection and editorial matter, Dorothea Lüddeckens, Philipp Hetmanczyk, Pamela E. Klassen, and Justin B. Stein;individual chapters, the contributors.
宗教,“中国病毒”,以及将亚裔美国人视为道德和医疗威胁的看法
本章在更广泛的背景下讨论了COVID-19大流行期间的反亚洲仇恨,并认为当代将亚洲人视为“黄祸”的恐惧源于长期以来关于种族、宗教和疾病的观念。在2020年COVID-19大流行期间,亚裔美国人发现自己再次与将他们与疾病联系在一起的黄祸言论作斗争。停止亚太裔仇恨报告中心于2020年3月创建了一个仇恨事件报告系统,在其成立的第一个月,就收到了大约1500起针对全国各地所有种族的亚裔美国人的冠状病毒相关仇恨事件报告,其中女性报告的数量是男性的两倍。与之前的流行病和危机所表现出的反亚裔仇恨不同,2020年的亚裔美国人相对来说更有组织,资源也更充足。亚裔美国人对黄祸言论和骚扰、歧视和暴力的报道的复苏感到震惊,做出了创造性和强有力的回应。©2022选择和编辑事项,Dorothea lddeckens, Philipp Hetmanczyk, Pamela E. Klassen和Justin B. Stein;个别章节,贡献者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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