The heathen, the plague, and the model minority: Perpetual self-assessment of Asian Americans as a panoptic mechanism

IF 0.7 0 RELIGION
Yuen-Yung Sherry Chan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Incidents of racism against Asians have been rising since the COVID-19 pandemic turned global in early 2020. Employing Foucault’s concept of panopticism and Kathryn Lofton’s insights on the function of religion to demarcate group boundaries, this article argues that American religion constructs Asian American stereotypes to limit the discursive space within which Asian Americans may negotiate their identities. These discursive limitations have, in turn, buttressed white supremacy. This article examines how some Asians and Asian Americans respond to anti-Asian sentiments during the pandemic by performing a close reading of an op-ed by prominent Asian American politician Andrew Yang in The Washington Post. This reading reveals that Yang’s colorblind solution upholds whiteness as the American gnosis and limits the discursive space in which Asian Americans may negotiate their identities. This article also discusses how the myth of America as a white Christian country withstands challenges from minority groups contesting its dominance.
异教徒、瘟疫和模范少数民族:作为全景机制的亚裔美国人的永久自我评估
自2020年初新冠肺炎疫情在全球蔓延以来,针对亚裔的种族主义事件一直在上升。本文运用福柯的全景主义概念和凯瑟琳·洛夫顿对宗教划分群体边界功能的见解,认为美国宗教构建亚裔美国人的刻板印象是为了限制亚裔美国人协商身份的话语空间。这些话语限制反过来又支持了白人至上主义。这篇文章仔细阅读了著名亚裔政治家安德鲁·杨在《华盛顿邮报》上的一篇专栏文章,探讨了一些亚裔和亚裔美国人在疫情期间如何应对反亚裔情绪。这篇文章揭示了杨的色盲解决方案坚持白人是美国人的灵知,并限制了亚裔美国人协商身份的话语空间。这篇文章还讨论了美国作为一个白人基督教国家的神话是如何经受住少数群体对其统治地位的挑战的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: Critical Research on Religion is a peer-reviewed, international journal focusing on the development of a critical theoretical framework and its application to research on religion. It provides a common venue for those engaging in critical analysis in theology and religious studies, as well as for those who critically study religion in the other social sciences and humanities such as philosophy, sociology, anthropology, psychology, history, and literature. A critical approach examines religious phenomena according to both their positive and negative impacts. It draws on methods including but not restricted to the critical theory of the Frankfurt School, Marxism, post-structuralism, feminism, psychoanalysis, ideological criticism, post-colonialism, ecocriticism, and queer studies. The journal seeks to enhance an understanding of how religious institutions and religious thought may simultaneously serve as a source of domination and progressive social change. It attempts to understand the role of religion within social and political conflicts. These conflicts are often based on differences of race, class, ethnicity, region, gender, and sexual orientation – all of which are shaped by social, political, and economic inequity. The journal encourages submissions of theoretically guided articles on current issues as well as those with historical interest using a wide range of methodologies including qualitative, quantitative, and archival. It publishes articles, review essays, book reviews, thematic issues, symposia, and interviews.
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