
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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A Queer Case of Gay Representations A Queer Case of Gay Representations
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Feminine Asian Male Bodies Feminine Asian Male Bodies
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The Large White Body and the Small Asian Body The Large White Body and the Small Asian Body
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Infantilizing Asian Male Bodies Infantilizing Asian Male Bodies
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Asian Male Bodies as the Comic Punchline Asian Male Bodies as the Comic Punchline
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The Asian Man as the Queer Wife The Asian Man as the Queer Wife
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White Male Supremacy White Male Supremacy
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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3 From “Little Brown Brothers” to “Queer Asian Wives”: Constructing the Asian Male Body
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Published:July 2016
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Abstract
As Richard Dyer has noted, the most significant function of stereotypes is “to maintain sharp boundary definitions, to define clearly where the pale ends and thus who is clearly within and who clearly beyond it.” This chapter argues that media images of Asian men, both historic and contemporary, not only work to push Asian men “beyond the pale” of “socially acceptable masculinity” but also help to simultaneously define the very socially acceptable boundaries of masculinity that it seeks to push them out of. Thus, the “most significant function” of stereotypes is not merely to define boundaries but to simultaneously create those boundaries. To do so, this chapter traces the historical trajectory of Asian male images in the Western imagination and works to discuss how those images constructed Asian men and helped to define the very nature of “appropriate masculinity” by defining what was, in essence, not appropriate.
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