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  2. Examples of yellowface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Examples_of_yellowface

    While other works had used Asian make-up to ridicule or vilify Asian features, this B movie used yellowface directly to deny a group of Asian Americans their civil rights. [10] Twentieth Century-Fox seized on one of the most controversial aspects of the homefront, the roundup and internment of people of Japanese descent on the West Coast.

  3. Portrayal of East Asians in American film and theater

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrayal_of_East_Asians...

    Yellowface in theatre has been called "the practice of white actors donning overdone face paint and costumes that serves as a caricatured representation of traditional Asian garb." [ 73 ] Founded in 2011, the Asian American Performers Action Coalition (AAPAC) works in an effort to "expand the perception of Asian American performers in order to ...

  4. List of masked wrestlers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_masked_wrestlers

    In Japan, masked wrestlers are also very popular. Many are heavily influenced by anime and manga characters such as Tiger Mask and Black Tiger during the 1980s, and Jushin Thunder Liger in the 90s. Many of these stars would appear in World Championship Wrestling during the "Monday Night War" period. [2]

  5. Asian Americans in arts and entertainment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian_Americans_in_arts...

    According to author Kent Ono, "Usually yellow peril discourse constructs and Asian-white dialectic emphasizing the powerful, threatening potential of Asians and Asian Americans, while simultaneously constructing whites as vulnerable, threatened, or otherwise in danger."

  6. List of hāfu people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hāfu_people

    Hāfu (ハーフ, "half") describes an individual who is either the child of one Japanese and one non-Japanese parent or, less commonly, two half Japanese parents. Because the term is specific to individuals of ethnic Japanese ancestry, individuals whose Japanese ancestry is not of ethnic Japanese origin, such as Zainichi Koreans (e.g. Crystal Kay Williams and Kiko Mizuhara) will not be listed.

  7. Hapa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hapa

    For example, hapalua is half, hapahā is one-fourth, and hapanui means majority. [2] [3] In Hawaii, the term can be used in conjunction with other Hawaiian racial and ethnic descriptors to specify a particular racial or ethnic mixture. [2] [3] An example of this is hapa haole (part European/White). [18] [19]

  8. Stereotypes of East Asians in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotypes_of_East_Asians...

    In reality, the term "Asian American" broadly refers to all people who descend from the Continental Asian sub-regions of Central, East, Southeast, South, and West Asia as a whole. While people of Chinese descent make up roughly 5 million of the roughly 18 million Asians in America, a plurality, other Asian American ethnic groups such as the ...

  9. Bian lian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bian_lian

    The actor can pull down a mask which has previously been hidden on top of their head, changing their face to red, green, blue or black to express happiness, hate, anger or sadness, respectively. Face-dragging (Chinese: 抹臉) The actor drags greasepaint hidden in their sideburns or eyebrows across their face to change their appearance. [8] [9]