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The book describes Asian Women frustration with the mainstream feminist movement in the United States dominated by White Women. It addresses the attitudes of Asian women on a wide variety of topics including insights on immigration, jobs, culture, and the media as it tells the history and formation of the Asian Feminist Movement. [1] [2]
The Asian men's rights movement, often shortened as MRAsians, is an anti-feminist subculture among Asian-American men. [1] [2] The movement has been linked to harassment of Asian-American women, feminists, and public figures, [2] [3] and associated communities are characterized by misogyny, anti-blackness, and Asian-supremacist views.
For anyone looking to learn more about the Asian American experience, past and present, one of the best ways to get educated is to crack open a book. 25 Essential Books About the Asian American ...
East Asian men are commonly portrayed in Western media as male chauvinists. [118] Even literature written by Asian American authors is not free of the pervasive popular cliche of Asian men. Amy Tan's book The Joy Luck Club has been criticized by Asian American figures such as Frank Chin for perpetuating racist stereotypes of Asian men. [119] [120]
Tizon told his own story as a first-generation immigrant and an Asian male growing up in the United States to examine cultural mythologies related to race and gender, in particular the Western stereotypes of Asian men and women. [5] The book won the 2011 J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize Work-In-Progress Award, sponsored by Columbia University and ...
Asian American Women Artists Association Staff (2007). Cheers to Muses: Contemporary Works by Asian American Women. San Francisco, California, USA: Asian American Women Artists Association. ISBN 9780978735906. Wang, Grace (January 2015). Soundtracks of Asian America: Navigating Race through Musical Performance. Duke University Press.
Others have criticized Chinese American women authors for criticizing sexism in Chinese culture; in so doing, critics argue, these women are participating in the "racial castration" [7] of Chinese and Asian American men, who are already "materially and psychically feminized" by mainstream, white American culture. [8]
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