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Stereotypes of South Asians

Stereotypes of South Asians are broadly believed impressions about individuals of South Asian origin that are often inconsistent with reality. While the impressions are wrongly presumed to be universally true for all people of South Asian origin, these stereotypes adversely affect the South Asians as well as the acculturation process.[2][3][4]

Stereotypes against the people of the indian subcontinent have a long history. In 1914, Indians on the steamer Komagata Maru in Vancouver, Canada were stopped, denied a chance to disembark for two months, then forced to go back to India due to stereotypes held against them.[1]

With 20th century immigration of South Asians around the world, especially to the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States, ethnic stereotyping of South Asians has become common place. These stereotypes have been found by scholars to be dehumanizing, making South Asians more prone to mistreatment and crime, a constraint on their ability to productively contribute, as well as a cause of depression and ill health.[2][5][6]

Ethnic stereotypes of South Asians have included Orientalism and Romanticism as well as scientific racism. These stereotypes are applied in both an unrealistically ideal way and sometimes an unrealistically negative way.

Contemporary stereotypes edit

South Asians are stereotyped around the world in ways that are dehumanizing, and in some cases it can lead to depression and mental health issues.[2][7] Stereotypes included cultural prejudices related to the South Asian predilection for certain professions, such as medicine, engineering, and computing, or their presence in service industries as motel owners or cab drivers.[8] As South Asians continue to assimilate, more positive perceptions prevail.[9][10]

Dual socioeconomic profiling edit

South Asians are stereotyped as belonging to two socioeconomic groups.[8] They are stereotyped either as convenience store or restaurant owners, cab drivers or motel operators who are uneducated, greedy, with large families and live in crowded homes. Alternatively, they are stereotyped as snobbish, upwardly software programmers and doctors, who lack English-speaking fluency and are willing to take a lower salary. These stereotypes are built, claim scholars,[8][11] by media shows such as the Bangladeshi store owners represented as Sirajul and Mujibur in David Letterman's show, or by the character Apu in The Simpsons, or the Babu Bhatt character on Seinfeld, or the British TV show The Kumars at No. 42 (though this may be an intentional invoking of the stereotype to call attention to it). This contrasts with the reality that South Asians are active, in various levels of prominence and service, in every profession.

Model minority edit

Along with East Asian people, South Asians are stereotyped as model minorities with certain expected behavior.[12] These stereotypes are encouraged by media stories such an article by Forbes Magazine entitled "Indian Americans: The New Model Minority". Richwine claims, "The success of Indian Americans is often ascribed to the culture they bring with them, which places strong – some would even say obsessive – emphasis on academic achievement". The article highlights how Indian American children win spelling bee contests, but the article does not mention that some Indian-American immigrant children also struggle to learn fluent English as a second language.[12][13] Similarly, while Asian Indians in the United States have among the highest percentage of college degrees as well as highest income among all ethnic and racial groups, for every South Asian who has a degree with high income, there is another South Asian who struggles to gain job skills and become trained to be gainfully employed.[14][15]

South Asian women edit

In a 1993 study of stereotypes held by midwives in the British National Health Service, several stereotypes were found to be prevalent against women of South Asian descent.[5] One, the South Asian mothers were stereotyped as abusing the social service and failing to take recommended treatment. Second, they were stereotyped as those who make fuss about nothing. Third, they were stereotyped as lacking 'normal maternal instinct'. The study found communication difficulties to be part of the problem, particularly among women who were Muslim South Asians with Urdu as their first language; this problem vanished when hospital staff of South Asian descent were included in the team attending the expectant mother. Further, the study found experimenter's bias in a population wide study that included native British people, people of South Asian descent and people from other parts of the world.[5][16] Contrary to the stereotypes, comparative analysis revealed that the rate of health care service use, rate of diligent treatment and follow up, as well as 'maternal instinct' behavior was no different among South Asian women than natives or other ethnic groups.

Resistance to assimilation edit

Two conflicting but prevailing stereotypes in Europe and North America relate to alienation and assimilation by people of South Asian origins.

Hernandez, for example, in her analysis of Richard Rodriguez – the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award winner – and V.S. Naipaul – the Nobel laureate in literature of Indo-Caribbean origin – quotes Albert Memmi's classic, illustrating the stereotype. Memmi claims they make every effort to look Western, in the hope that no one will recognise them; from this proceeds their efforts to forget their past, to change their collective customs, their enthusiastic adoption of the Western language, culture and values, alleges Memmi.[17][18]

Simultaneously these people are also stereotyped as old fashioned, irrational, weird in their customs, servile to their ethnic habits, lacking all sense of individuality, not eager to learn and grow, not speaking or adopting local language (for example, French or English), not wanting to assimilate and be a part of the melting pot. Some stereotype them as betraying a past, others as betraying the future. These stereotypes reflect innate discomfort, confusion and possibly a struggle with rejection by those who stereotype as well as those who are being stereotyped.[17][18]

Hernandez notes, for Naipaul, after a start in a humble family background, personal and professional success could only be achieved through learning, understanding and assimilation. This conflicting stereotype is not unique to South Asians. As Hernandez outlines, the same stereotypes exist against people from different regions of the world, such as against Rodriguez of Mexico.[18]

Historical edit

Komagata Maru edit

In 1914, a steamer named Komagata Maru arrived in the harbor of Vancouver, Canada. On it were 376 Indians, mostly Sikhs.[19][20] Both Canada and India were part of the British Commonwealth at the time, movement of people and migration within the empire was permissible, with millions of Indians sought by the British government for its World War I efforts outside India. The passengers on Komagata Maru were not soldiers but workers. The provincial government stopped the steamer at sea, refused the tired passengers from disembarking for two months, argued that the South Asians didn't belong in Canada, then forced the steamer and passengers to go back to India. Political leaders and newspaper media parroted allegations, impressions, and cartoons for two months, mocking the immigrants waiting in the boat at sea.[21] This action has been explained by scholars,[1][22] as a result of four stereotypes. First, they were stereotyped as polluting the collective character of British Columbia as a land of White, European-based settlers. Second, South Asians were stereotyped to be from an insulated and unassimilable culture. Third, they were stereotyped as those who were willing to work for less than a fair wages. Fourth, South Asians were stereotyped as unclean, diseased and a threat to public health. Robert McDonald suggests[1] that these stereotypes were false because it was the prevalent prejudice that contributed to their segregation and difficulty in their assimilation, they did not compete with Whites for employment but took the unskilled and rough jobs for which there were no White workers available, and they were neither diseased nor unclean as wealthier Europeans families eagerly sought them as cooks and errand houseboys inside their homes. The stereotypes, claims Robert McDonald, were irrational constructions.

After being forced to go back, Komagata Maru returned to India with emotionally distraught and angry Indians. Some were arrested on arrival of the steamer in Calcutta by British officials, few shot for resisting arrest, others jumped off the ship and escaped, then joined the cause of independence of India from British rule. The Indian government in 1952, and the Canadian government in 1989 marked the Komagata Maru incident with memorials and a reminder of the dangers of discrimination and stereotypes.[19][20] On May 18, 2016, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tendered a formal "full apology" for the incident in the House of Commons.[23][24]

Indomania edit

Friedrich Schlegel wrote in a letter to Tieck that India was the source of all languages, thoughts and poems, and that "everything" came from India.[25] In the 18th century, Voltaire wrote that "I am convinced that everything has come down to us from the banks of the Ganges, astronomy, astrology and metempsychosis.[26] Mark Twain similarly enthused about Indian culture and achievements.[27]

Indophobia edit

The term "Indophobia" was first coined in western academia by American Indologist Thomas Trautmann to describe negative attitudes expressed by some British Indologists against Indian history, society, religions and culture.[28] Historians have noted that during the British Empire, "evangelical influence drove British policy down a path that tended to minimize and denigrate the accomplishments of Indian civilization and to position itself as the negation of the earlier British Indomania that was nourished by belief in Indian wisdom."[29]

In Charles Grant's highly influential "Observations on the ...Asiatic subjects of Great Britain" (1796),[30] Grant alleged that the Hindus are "a people exceedingly depraved". Similarly, British colonial era historian, James Mill claimed that both Indians and Chinese people are cowardly, unfeeling, and mendacious. Both Mill and Grant attacked Orientalist scholarship that was too respectful of Indian culture.[31] James Mill wrote extensively about India and on Eastern religions, even though he never once visited India.[32] Nevertheless, James Mill was widely read, and influenced the initial impressions of South Asia in Western mind. Mill was later criticised for being prejudiced against Hindus.[33] The Indologist H.H. Wilson wrote that the tendency of Mill's work is "evil".[34] Such historic Indophobic literature has been suggested as a cause of dehumanizing stereotypes about South Asians.[35][36]

Rebellion and miscegenation edit

Stereotypes of Indians intensified and changed during and after the Indian Rebellion of 1857 when some Indian sepoys and members of the native population rebelled against the British East India Company's rule in India. It has been argued that allegations of war rape were used as propaganda by British colonialists to justify the colonisation of India. While incidents of rape committed by Indian rebels against English women and girls were generally uncommon during the rebellion, this was exaggerated to great effect by the British media to justify British colonialism in the Indian subcontinent and to violently suppress opposition.[37]

At the time, British newspapers had printed various apparently eyewitness accounts of English women and girls being raped by Indian rebels, with little corroboration to support these accounts. It was later found that some of these accounts were false stories and a few created to paint the native people of India as savages who needed to be civilised by British colonialists, a mission sometimes known as "The White Man's Burden". One such account published by The Times, regarding an incident where 48 English girls as young as 10–14 had been raped by Indian rebels in Delhi, was criticized as false propaganda by Karl Marx, who pointed out that the story was written by a clergyman in Bangalore, far from the events of the rebellion.[38] These stereotypes and allegations were later argued as false by scholars, but they did harden the British attitude to the Indian population.[39]

The stereotype of the Indian "dark-skinned rapist" occurred frequently in English literature of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The idea of protecting English "female chastity" from the "lustful Indian male" had a significant influence on the policies of the British Raj to prevent racial miscegenation between the British elite and the native Indian population. While most of these discriminatory policies were directed against native Indians, some restrictive policies were also imposed on British females to "protect" them from miscegenation.[40][41][42]

Sexual jealousy edit

Indo-Caribbean people were brought to the Caribbean from various parts of India as indentured laborers for agricultural estates over a century ago. At these times they were stereotyped as being jealous for women of their ethnic origins. For example:

The shortage of Indian women resulted in violence committed by jealous lovers and husbands, creating a stereotype of East Indian men, which gained in infamy,[43] coolies reputation with the police was bad and significantly while the Negroes use their tongue in the argument, the Indian commit murder, and given the scarcity of Indian women, without hesitation.[43] Thus the stereotype is reinforced ascribing to the Indian husband a frantically jealous and physically violent disposition.[43]

Unqualified to be a judge edit

In 1883, the Ilbert Bill, which would have granted judges of Indian descent in Bengal the right to judge offenders irrespective of their ethnic origins including those of British descent, was opposed by the British. The opposition was based on stereotyping Indian judges as someone who could not be trusted in dealing with cases involving English women, colloquially called memsahib.[44] The British press in India even spread wild rumours about how Indian judges would abuse their power to fill their harems with white English females, which helped raise considerable support against the bill.[45]

The stereotype of Indian males as dark-skinned rapists lusting after white English females was challenged by several novels such as E. M. Forster's A Passage to India (1924) and Paul Scott's The Jewel in the Crown (1966), both of which involve an Indian male being wrongly accused of raping an English female.[46] Some activists argued that these stereotypes were wrong because Indians had proven to be more receptive to women's rights and progress, with the University of Calcutta becoming one of the first universities to admit female graduates to its degree programmes in 1878, before any of the British universities.[47]

Region-specific stereotypes edit

United Kingdom and English-speaking territories edit

Cultural stereotypes edit

British sociologists Mike O'Donnell and Sue Sharpe studied British Asian students and came to similar conclusions regarding problems faced by Asian youths at lower class schools. Whereas Black British students were respected and admired by their White British peers as "macho," Asian youths had trouble gaining this same kind of respect and status. O'Donnell and Sharpe found that many Asian youths are stereotyped as weaklings, warriors or as a patriarch.[48]

The weakling stereotype, found in the UK and English speaking territories, refers to the idea that South Asians are conformists, intelligent, lacking in athletic ability and non-confrontational.[2][49][50][51]

The warrior stereotype is growing in the United Kingdom.[52][53][54] Some Brits stereotype Sikhs as warriors and Muslims as inbred,[55] as opposed to the rest of the South Asian community who are generally viewed as Buddhist pacifists or intellects.[56][57] The Warrior stereotype has become the replacement for the Thug stereotype. During Colonial Era, South Asian criminals were referred as thugs due to the presence of the Thuggee syndicate. The word thug originates from the syndicate and was originally used as a term for South Asian criminals. Due to the African-American hip-hop group adopting the name Thug Life, the word thug is no longer associated with South Asian criminals. Many South Asian youths are often caricatured as rebelling against a society which stereotypes them as a model minority, as well as against their perceived strict upbringing.[58][59][60][61]

This has fed the stereotype that Pakistanis and Bangladeshis are more aggressive and form gangs. They are then further stereotyped as having poor social skills, being unable to speak to ordinary White British people and have poor listening skills.[62][63]

Since post 9/11 and 7/7, South Asian Muslims (particularly those of Bangladeshi and Pakistani origin and in many cases of Indian origin), have been stereotyped as anti-Western and/or extremists.[64][65] This may have contributed to increased tensions with ethnic and religious groups in the West.[66][67][68] In some cases even members of Hindu and Sikh community are stereotyped as terrorists in the West.[citation needed]

Following a number of high-profile controversies about the proportion of men of South Asian heritage found to be involved in child sexual exploitation, South Asian Muslims (particularly those of Pakistani origin) have often been stereotyped as sexual groomers.[64][69]

In literary studies, critics such as Homi Bhabha and Rey Chow have theorized that cultural stereotypes prevail because they work through repetition and ambivalence, easily shifting between contradictory meanings. Thus in colonial culture the 'native' or 'ethnic' is stereotyped as sly and indolent, lascivious and impotent.[70] More recently, scholars such as Mrinalini Chakravorty have considered how contemporary fiction from and about South Asia traffics in stereotypes.[71]

China edit

Due to China's economic rivalry with India, a large number of Chinese view India negatively, with several stereotypes of Indians commonplace in Chinese culture.[72]

In 2012, Krish Raghav, an Indian journalist, stated that within China, the notion of India and Indian-ness is largely built on rumour and stereotype. Raghav reported that for China's online community, "India" is a combined construct of the character Rajesh Koothrappali from the sitcom Big Bang Theory, the comedian Russell Peters, images of overcrowded Indian train with people hanging off the sides, and dead bodies floating down the river Ganges. These stereotypes are frequently evoked with the descriptor, "disgusting". The smell of curry is often used as a derogatory epithet. Within the Chinese state media, there is China's official line, parroted in newspapers and TV news media, of India as a "rival"; India's woeful infrastructure is emphasised and connected to defects of democracy. Historical documentaries on China Central Television paint Indians as "soldiers of the British", lumping them together with other imperialist powers[73]

However, many Chinese view Indian Hindus with positive attributes too due to historic connections through Buddhism and ancient cultural contact. A commonly held view is that India is rich in culture but under-developed.[74]

Malaysia edit

Currently, around 7% of Malaysia's population consists of Indians, mainly from the Tamil ethno-linguistic group of Southern India, as a minority of a largely Malay population in Peninsular Malaysia.

There are many stereotypes concerning Malaysian Indians.[75] Some of them include that Malaysian Indians are considered as heavy drinkers and robbers. Malaysian Indians are also primely suspected of being members of gangster or terrorist organisations and sometimes become victims to false accusation.[76]

Racism still remains a major problem in Malaysia and some stereotypes have led to cases of public bullying and racially hurtful commentary, such as being called a 'keling', 'mabuk' (drunkard) etc.

Singapore edit

Around 10% of Singapore's population consists of Indians, mainly from the Tamil ethno-linguistic group of Southern India, as a minority of a largely Chinese population. There are also some 160,000 non-skilled foreigners currently working in Singapore – a majority of them are from the Indian subcontinent.[49]

A stereotype of Singaporean Indians is that the Indian body is lacking in athleticism.[49] They are however the richest and most successful ethnic group in Singapore,[77] with exceptional educational attainment rates[78] and low levels of poverty.[79]

Racism remains a minor problem in Singapore and some stereotypes have led to cases of public bullying and racially hurtful commentary, such as being called a 'black tofu'.[49]

Lower class foreign workers congregate in the Indian historical and now tourist enclave called Little India.[49] Little India with its large concentration of Indians is not frequented by some Chinese Singaporeans because it is perceived as an alien space which is potentially threatening and dangerous.[49] In 2013 a minor riot occurred in the area involving construction workers from Bangladesh, Pakistan and India, which helped fuel stereotypes of construction workers as being dangerous.[80]

Fiji edit

In Fiji, another country where large numbers of people of Indian origin were brought for agricultural plantation work, over 125 years ago, they are viewed in a manner different from some other parts of the world. Sienkiewicz finds the stereotypes popular in Pacific Islands is that Indians are too materialistic, caring only about money; that while the Indians work very hard to attain financial success, they refuse to share it. People with origins in India are also thought in Fiji to be too private and lacking a culture of caring for larger families.[81] Indians, Sienkiewicz finds, intentionally prefer to be in nuclear families, living in isolated homes rather than communal joint families in koros (villages). Some she interviewed claimed, "Before we were in extended families, but now we are all in nuclear families. Just a small house, their family and that's it. Relatives come and they go; they do not live in that house. It is a better way of living. Everyone's needs and wants are cared for. Mostly, by having nuclear families and not living in the koro (village), we find that there is less conflict, less chance of conflict." This preference for private and diligent life is a matter of significant ethnic stereotypes and conflicts in Fiji.[81] Sienkiewicz suggests that the British incorporation of the ethnic separation model in Fiji, while originally devised to help colonialists govern smoothly, has had long-term effects on the ethnic identities and mutual stereotypes between both Fijians and Indians in Fiji.[81]The British had tried actively to separate and segregate the Indian and local community lest they not find among themselves the common hatred for the British which would prove fatal for them.

New Zealand edit

A Massey University study finds that the ethnic minority of Indian descent are stereotyped, but so are other ethnic groups. However, inter-ethnic and stereotypes-driven bullying of students of Indian descent was higher; the students of Indian descent were least likely to retaliate, report abuse to authorities or approach officials for assistance in prevention. Stereotyped and bullied Asian Indians were most likely to accept suffering, emotional trauma and ill health problems.[82]

Negative stereotypes for Asian Indians included being presumed as unfriendly, cliquish, unemotional, weird, snobbish, uncivilized, terrorists and cheap. Many of these stereotypes did not lead to inter-ethnic bullying, but some did.[82]

United States edit

Cultural prejudices in American schools edit

Cultural stereotypes prevalent in American schools negatively impact students of South Asian origin, in terms of social stress, feeling dehumanized and their general sense of well being.[83] American sociologist Yvette Rosser finds[84] that negative attitudes and images about South Asian cultures are taught in American schools or through the media, and these misconceptions may color people's personal socialization experiences.[85] Sensationalist news stories about India often reinforce preconceived ideas.

Social studies teachers can play a critical role in eliminating cultural prejudices, but instead typically reinforce stereotypes about cultures different from their own, and present biased information about Asians, thereby losing the opportunity for deeper understanding.

In numerous interviews of students of Asian descent, as compiled by Rosser, individuals of Asian origin were asked the following questions:[84]

  • Describe any stereotypes and misrepresentations about India that were taught in America as fact.
  • Do you feel, as a student of South Asian descent, that your presence in the classroom had an influence on the manner in which the course materials on India (or Asia in general) were presented?
  • If Indian and South Asian topics were presented in your classes, what ideas were emphasized?
  • Compare the coverage of South Asia with that of other areas of Asia.

Many Americans of South Asian origin who participated in the survey reported numerous stereotypes. Some sample stereotypes reported by Rosser, and others,[86][87] include the following:

The presentation of South Asians is a standard pedagogic approach which runs quickly from the "Cradle of Civilization"—contrasting the Indus Valley with Egypt and Mesopotamia—on past the Aryans, who were somehow our ancestors— to the poverty stricken, superstitious, polytheistic, caste ridden Hindu way of life. . . and then somehow magically culminates with a eulogy of Mahatma Gandhi. A typical textbook trope presents the standard Ancient India Meets the Age of Expansion Approach with a color photo of the Taj Mahal. There may be a side bar on ahimsa or a chart of connecting circles graphically explaining samsara and reincarnation, or illustrations of the four stages of life or the Four Noble Truths. Amid the dearth of real information there may be found an entire page dedicated to a deity such as Indra or Varuna, who admittedly are rather obscure vis-à-vis the beliefs of most modern Hindus.

— A South Asian in America[84]

India is considered as really dirty and the people not too intelligent. Teachers and the textbooks generally approached Asia from a negative perspective and, showed the desolate parts of India, not the beauty. Only lives of the poor were represented and the treatment of Asia showed only the problems. Students never learned that, in India, there is a middle class made up of approximately 300 million consumers. Another student complained that India is depicted as just a poor country and that the lives of the people are dealt with in a simplistic manner.

— A woman born in the United States who went to high school in Dallas[84]

Rosser notes that the stereotypical discourse in much of the United States about South Asia is rarely devoted to economic development and democratic institutions in independent India. India is not depicted as a viable political state. People quickly make sweeping and flawed metaphysical assumptions about its respective religions and cultures, but are far more circumspect when evaluating civil society and political culture in modern India. It is as if the value of South Asia resides only in its ancient contributions to human knowledge whereas its attempts to modernize or develop are to be winked at and patronized.

After her own studies, Rosser began to question the interpretations of some of the more well-known, leftist-oriented scholars from India who dissect the nascent nation, for whatever reasons, along with their Western counterparts, regularly demonize India's national urges, deconstructing and disempowering individuals of South Asian origin. Most people stereotype South Asians as if the nation is little more than "Taj Mahal, famine, hunger, population, poverty, Hare Krishna, and Gandhi."[84][88]

Alternatively, the stereotypes stress prejudices about "Hinduism, the caste system, poverty, third world country, inferiority" as if that is all India is. One survey participant confided that the diversity of views and culture within India was not depicted accurately and "only negativity was enforced; we of South Asian origin are stereotyped as that we all starve, eat monkey brains, worship rats and cows." It is as if every single individual in India is oppressed or oppressing others, it is stereotyped as a backward country that treats their women poorly and kills their baby girls. Checking for facts or reality is considered unnecessary. Similar observations have been made by other scholars, for both recent immigrants and second generation South Asian Americans born in the United States.[83][86][89]

In the minds of many Americans, Rosser writes, Indian women are to be pitied and the positive social progress made by many women in India is completely ignored.[84] Despite the fact that women's right to vote, other labor and civil rights in the United States took time in American history, such facts are never contextualized or compared to the social and political uplift of modern Indian women. The prevailing image is that if the unfortunate females of South Asia survive a deprived childhood they are likely to be burned in a dowry death after their forced marriage to a complete stranger. Indian women are shown as downtrodden and powerless victims, unlike American women who have more freedom. Indira Gandhi is seen as an anomaly. The numerous Indian women who every year join the colleges in America are also seen as anomalous.

Rosser notes that while India's religion and the caste system are emphasized in American discourse, no mention is made of post-independence secular India's efforts toward national integration of its minorities. No mention is made of laws and efforts against discrimination, or the country's 60-year effort towards active inclusion of scheduled caste and scheduled tribe population in educational and employment opportunities. People also forget to introspect the fact that social discrimination and prejudice has been a widespread worldwide issue, for example the treatment of African Americans in southern United States.[84]

Outsourcing/offshoring/call centres edit

Barack Obama has said that the prevailing stereotype being cultivated against Indians in the United States is that "all U.S. jobs are being outsourced to India," and the stereotype is adversely affecting India–United States relations.[90] He also commented that such stereotypes have "outlived their usefulness"[91] and "ignore today's reality." Obama said, "Trade between our countries is not just a one-way street of American jobs and companies moving to India. It is a dynamic two-way relationship that is creating jobs, growth and higher standards in both our countries."[92]

Consequences edit

Stereotypes of South Asians have been found by scholars to be dehumanizing, making them more prone to mistreatment and crime.[50][93][94] Many of the stereotypes were created by the British who ruled and oppressed to dehumanize the people to exert a greater control of the population. They promoted a negative view of the subcontinent and its inhabitants which unfortunately still exists to this day and has been since carried forward by the present Western Media.

As reported in cases of other stereotyped ethnic groups, scholars also confirm the phenomenon of stereotype threat in South Asians, a psychological process that increases anxiety while reducing the potential performance of South Asians and their ability to productively contribute.[51][94] The constant presence of a social or work environment filled with stereotypes has been found as a significant cause of depression and ill health.[2][5][86]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e Rahman and Pollock, Acculturation, Competence, and Mental Health Among South Asian Students in the United States, Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development, Volume 32, Issue 3, pages 130–142, July 2004
  3. ^ Hagendoorn, L, (1993), Ethnic categorization and outgroup exclusion: The role of cultural values and social stereotypes in the construction of ethnic hierarchies, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 16, pages 26–51
  4. ^ John Berry (1997), Immigration, Acculturation, and Adaptation, Applied Psychology: An International Review, 46 (1), pages 5–68
  5. ^ a b c d Isobel Bowler (1993), They're not the same as us: midwives stereotypes of South Asian descent maternity patients, Sociology of Health & Illness, Volume 15, Number 2, pages 157–178
  6. ^ Wang, Jennifer; Siy, John Oliver; Cheryan, Sapna (2011). "Racial Discrimination and Mental Health Among Asian American Youth" (PDF). In Leon, Frederick T.; Juang, Linda (eds.). Asian American and Pacific Islander children and mental health. Santa Barbara, Calif. ISBN 978-0-313-38300-7. OCLC 729636780.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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  11. ^ Jorge Sanchez, The South Asian Neighbour and Her/His Stereotype Goes Global, Universidad de Salamanca, (2012)
  12. ^ a b Navaratnam, S. (2011), Guilt, Shame and Model Minorities: How South Asian Youth in Toronto Navigate the Canadian Educational System, MA Thesis, University of Toronto, Canada
  13. ^ Richwine, J. (2009), Indian Americans: The new model minority, Forbes Magazine. February 2, 2009
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  17. ^ a b Memmi, Albert (1973). Portrait du decolonise. Payot. ISBN 978-2-07-034201-3.
  18. ^ a b c Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2011.
  19. ^ a b Citizenship and Immigration Canada Government of Canada (2009)
  20. ^ a b Voyage of the Komagata Maru Echoes of Freedom Series, University of California, Berkeley (2009)
  21. ^ see:
    • Media Representations of the Komagata Maru Incident Simon Fraser University (2010)
    • The story, documents, and cartoons against Komagata Maru Canada
  22. ^ Patricia Roy, British Fear of Asians, 1900–1950, in British Columbia: Historical Readings, Douglas & McIntyre, 1981
  23. ^ "Trudeau gives Komagata Maru apology in House of Commons | CBC News".
  24. ^ "Canada's Trudeau makes formal apology for racist Komagata Maru incident". The Washington Post.
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  27. ^ Twain, Mark (24 June 2004). Following the Equator. Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  28. ^ "Aryans and British India". Thomas R. Trautmann
  29. ^ Trautmann 1997:113
  30. ^ Grant, Charles. (1796) Observations on the state of society among the Asiatic subjects of Great Britain, particularly with respect to morals; and on the means of improving it, written chiefly in the year 1792.
  31. ^ Mill, James – 1858, 2:109, The history of British India.
  32. ^ Leonard Gordon, in Ainslie Embree and Carol Gluck (Editors), Asia in Western and World History, ISBN 978-1563242656, Columbia Project on Asia, M.E. Sharpe Inc, pages 138–142
  33. ^ Trautmann 1997:117
  34. ^ H.H. Wilson 1858 in James Mill 1858, The history of British India, Preface of the editor
  35. ^ Bhabha, Homi, Of mimicry and man: the ambivalence of colonial discourse, October, Volume 28, Discipleship: A Special Issue on Psychoanalysis (Spring, 1984), MIT Press, pages 125–133
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External links edit

  • South Asian stereotypes in the Vancouver press, Doreen M. Indra, Ethnic and Racial Studies Journal
  • They're not the same as us: midwives' stereotypes of South Asian descent maternity patients, Isobel Bowler, Sociology of Health & Illness Journal
  • Cultural stereotypes of women from South Asian communities: mental health care professionals' explanations for patterns of suicide and depression, J Burr, Social Science & Medicine Journal

stereotypes, south, asians, broadly, believed, impressions, about, individuals, south, asian, origin, that, often, inconsistent, with, reality, while, impressions, wrongly, presumed, universally, true, people, south, asian, origin, these, stereotypes, adversel. Stereotypes of South Asians are broadly believed impressions about individuals of South Asian origin that are often inconsistent with reality While the impressions are wrongly presumed to be universally true for all people of South Asian origin these stereotypes adversely affect the South Asians as well as the acculturation process 2 3 4 Stereotypes against the people of the indian subcontinent have a long history In 1914 Indians on the steamer Komagata Maru in Vancouver Canada were stopped denied a chance to disembark for two months then forced to go back to India due to stereotypes held against them 1 With 20th century immigration of South Asians around the world especially to the United Kingdom Canada and the United States ethnic stereotyping of South Asians has become common place These stereotypes have been found by scholars to be dehumanizing making South Asians more prone to mistreatment and crime a constraint on their ability to productively contribute as well as a cause of depression and ill health 2 5 6 Ethnic stereotypes of South Asians have included Orientalism and Romanticism as well as scientific racism These stereotypes are applied in both an unrealistically ideal way and sometimes an unrealistically negative way Contents 1 Contemporary stereotypes 1 1 Dual socioeconomic profiling 1 2 Model minority 1 3 South Asian women 1 4 Resistance to assimilation 2 Historical 2 1 Komagata Maru 2 2 Indomania 2 3 Indophobia 2 4 Rebellion and miscegenation 2 5 Sexual jealousy 2 6 Unqualified to be a judge 3 Region specific stereotypes 3 1 United Kingdom and English speaking territories 3 1 1 Cultural stereotypes 3 2 China 3 3 Malaysia 3 4 Singapore 3 5 Fiji 3 6 New Zealand 3 7 United States 3 7 1 Cultural prejudices in American schools 3 7 2 Outsourcing offshoring call centres 4 Consequences 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksContemporary stereotypes editSouth Asians are stereotyped around the world in ways that are dehumanizing and in some cases it can lead to depression and mental health issues 2 7 Stereotypes included cultural prejudices related to the South Asian predilection for certain professions such as medicine engineering and computing or their presence in service industries as motel owners or cab drivers 8 As South Asians continue to assimilate more positive perceptions prevail 9 10 Dual socioeconomic profiling edit South Asians are stereotyped as belonging to two socioeconomic groups 8 They are stereotyped either as convenience store or restaurant owners cab drivers or motel operators who are uneducated greedy with large families and live in crowded homes Alternatively they are stereotyped as snobbish upwardly software programmers and doctors who lack English speaking fluency and are willing to take a lower salary These stereotypes are built claim scholars 8 11 by media shows such as the Bangladeshi store owners represented as Sirajul and Mujibur in David Letterman s show or by the character Apu in The Simpsons or the Babu Bhatt character on Seinfeld or the British TV show The Kumars at No 42 though this may be an intentional invoking of the stereotype to call attention to it This contrasts with the reality that South Asians are active in various levels of prominence and service in every profession Model minority edit Main article Model minority Along with East Asian people South Asians are stereotyped as model minorities with certain expected behavior 12 These stereotypes are encouraged by media stories such an article by Forbes Magazine entitled Indian Americans The New Model Minority Richwine claims The success of Indian Americans is often ascribed to the culture they bring with them which places strong some would even say obsessive emphasis on academic achievement The article highlights how Indian American children win spelling bee contests but the article does not mention that some Indian American immigrant children also struggle to learn fluent English as a second language 12 13 Similarly while Asian Indians in the United States have among the highest percentage of college degrees as well as highest income among all ethnic and racial groups for every South Asian who has a degree with high income there is another South Asian who struggles to gain job skills and become trained to be gainfully employed 14 15 South Asian women edit In a 1993 study of stereotypes held by midwives in the British National Health Service several stereotypes were found to be prevalent against women of South Asian descent 5 One the South Asian mothers were stereotyped as abusing the social service and failing to take recommended treatment Second they were stereotyped as those who make fuss about nothing Third they were stereotyped as lacking normal maternal instinct The study found communication difficulties to be part of the problem particularly among women who were Muslim South Asians with Urdu as their first language this problem vanished when hospital staff of South Asian descent were included in the team attending the expectant mother Further the study found experimenter s bias in a population wide study that included native British people people of South Asian descent and people from other parts of the world 5 16 Contrary to the stereotypes comparative analysis revealed that the rate of health care service use rate of diligent treatment and follow up as well as maternal instinct behavior was no different among South Asian women than natives or other ethnic groups Resistance to assimilation edit Two conflicting but prevailing stereotypes in Europe and North America relate to alienation and assimilation by people of South Asian origins Hernandez for example in her analysis of Richard Rodriguez the Anisfield Wolf Book Award winner and V S Naipaul the Nobel laureate in literature of Indo Caribbean origin quotes Albert Memmi s classic illustrating the stereotype Memmi claims they make every effort to look Western in the hope that no one will recognise them from this proceeds their efforts to forget their past to change their collective customs their enthusiastic adoption of the Western language culture and values alleges Memmi 17 18 Simultaneously these people are also stereotyped as old fashioned irrational weird in their customs servile to their ethnic habits lacking all sense of individuality not eager to learn and grow not speaking or adopting local language for example French or English not wanting to assimilate and be a part of the melting pot Some stereotype them as betraying a past others as betraying the future These stereotypes reflect innate discomfort confusion and possibly a struggle with rejection by those who stereotype as well as those who are being stereotyped 17 18 Hernandez notes for Naipaul after a start in a humble family background personal and professional success could only be achieved through learning understanding and assimilation This conflicting stereotype is not unique to South Asians As Hernandez outlines the same stereotypes exist against people from different regions of the world such as against Rodriguez of Mexico 18 Historical editKomagata Maru edit In 1914 a steamer named Komagata Maru arrived in the harbor of Vancouver Canada On it were 376 Indians mostly Sikhs 19 20 Both Canada and India were part of the British Commonwealth at the time movement of people and migration within the empire was permissible with millions of Indians sought by the British government for its World War I efforts outside India The passengers on Komagata Maru were not soldiers but workers The provincial government stopped the steamer at sea refused the tired passengers from disembarking for two months argued that the South Asians didn t belong in Canada then forced the steamer and passengers to go back to India Political leaders and newspaper media parroted allegations impressions and cartoons for two months mocking the immigrants waiting in the boat at sea 21 This action has been explained by scholars 1 22 as a result of four stereotypes First they were stereotyped as polluting the collective character of British Columbia as a land of White European based settlers Second South Asians were stereotyped to be from an insulated and unassimilable culture Third they were stereotyped as those who were willing to work for less than a fair wages Fourth South Asians were stereotyped as unclean diseased and a threat to public health Robert McDonald suggests 1 that these stereotypes were false because it was the prevalent prejudice that contributed to their segregation and difficulty in their assimilation they did not compete with Whites for employment but took the unskilled and rough jobs for which there were no White workers available and they were neither diseased nor unclean as wealthier Europeans families eagerly sought them as cooks and errand houseboys inside their homes The stereotypes claims Robert McDonald were irrational constructions After being forced to go back Komagata Maru returned to India with emotionally distraught and angry Indians Some were arrested on arrival of the steamer in Calcutta by British officials few shot for resisting arrest others jumped off the ship and escaped then joined the cause of independence of India from British rule The Indian government in 1952 and the Canadian government in 1989 marked the Komagata Maru incident with memorials and a reminder of the dangers of discrimination and stereotypes 19 20 On May 18 2016 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tendered a formal full apology for the incident in the House of Commons 23 24 Indomania edit Main article Indomania Friedrich Schlegel wrote in a letter to Tieck that India was the source of all languages thoughts and poems and that everything came from India 25 In the 18th century Voltaire wrote that I am convinced that everything has come down to us from the banks of the Ganges astronomy astrology and metempsychosis 26 Mark Twain similarly enthused about Indian culture and achievements 27 Indophobia edit Main article Indophobia The term Indophobia was first coined in western academia by American Indologist Thomas Trautmann to describe negative attitudes expressed by some British Indologists against Indian history society religions and culture 28 Historians have noted that during the British Empire evangelical influence drove British policy down a path that tended to minimize and denigrate the accomplishments of Indian civilization and to position itself as the negation of the earlier British Indomania that was nourished by belief in Indian wisdom 29 In Charles Grant s highly influential Observations on the Asiatic subjects of Great Britain 1796 30 Grant alleged that the Hindus are a people exceedingly depraved Similarly British colonial era historian James Mill claimed that both Indians and Chinese people are cowardly unfeeling and mendacious Both Mill and Grant attacked Orientalist scholarship that was too respectful of Indian culture 31 James Mill wrote extensively about India and on Eastern religions even though he never once visited India 32 Nevertheless James Mill was widely read and influenced the initial impressions of South Asia in Western mind Mill was later criticised for being prejudiced against Hindus 33 The Indologist H H Wilson wrote that the tendency of Mill s work is evil 34 Such historic Indophobic literature has been suggested as a cause of dehumanizing stereotypes about South Asians 35 36 Rebellion and miscegenation edit Stereotypes of Indians intensified and changed during and after the Indian Rebellion of 1857 when some Indian sepoys and members of the native population rebelled against the British East India Company s rule in India It has been argued that allegations of war rape were used as propaganda by British colonialists to justify the colonisation of India While incidents of rape committed by Indian rebels against English women and girls were generally uncommon during the rebellion this was exaggerated to great effect by the British media to justify British colonialism in the Indian subcontinent and to violently suppress opposition 37 At the time British newspapers had printed various apparently eyewitness accounts of English women and girls being raped by Indian rebels with little corroboration to support these accounts It was later found that some of these accounts were false stories and a few created to paint the native people of India as savages who needed to be civilised by British colonialists a mission sometimes known as The White Man s Burden One such account published by The Times regarding an incident where 48 English girls as young as 10 14 had been raped by Indian rebels in Delhi was criticized as false propaganda by Karl Marx who pointed out that the story was written by a clergyman in Bangalore far from the events of the rebellion 38 These stereotypes and allegations were later argued as false by scholars but they did harden the British attitude to the Indian population 39 The stereotype of the Indian dark skinned rapist occurred frequently in English literature of the late 19th and early 20th centuries The idea of protecting English female chastity from the lustful Indian male had a significant influence on the policies of the British Raj to prevent racial miscegenation between the British elite and the native Indian population While most of these discriminatory policies were directed against native Indians some restrictive policies were also imposed on British females to protect them from miscegenation 40 41 42 Sexual jealousy edit Indo Caribbean people were brought to the Caribbean from various parts of India as indentured laborers for agricultural estates over a century ago At these times they were stereotyped as being jealous for women of their ethnic origins For example The shortage of Indian women resulted in violence committed by jealous lovers and husbands creating a stereotype of East Indian men which gained in infamy 43 coolies reputation with the police was bad and significantly while the Negroes use their tongue in the argument the Indian commit murder and given the scarcity of Indian women without hesitation 43 Thus the stereotype is reinforced ascribing to the Indian husband a frantically jealous and physically violent disposition 43 Unqualified to be a judge edit In 1883 the Ilbert Bill which would have granted judges of Indian descent in Bengal the right to judge offenders irrespective of their ethnic origins including those of British descent was opposed by the British The opposition was based on stereotyping Indian judges as someone who could not be trusted in dealing with cases involving English women colloquially called memsahib 44 The British press in India even spread wild rumours about how Indian judges would abuse their power to fill their harems with white English females which helped raise considerable support against the bill 45 The stereotype of Indian males as dark skinned rapists lusting after white English females was challenged by several novels such as E M Forster s A Passage to India 1924 and Paul Scott s The Jewel in the Crown 1966 both of which involve an Indian male being wrongly accused of raping an English female 46 Some activists argued that these stereotypes were wrong because Indians had proven to be more receptive to women s rights and progress with the University of Calcutta becoming one of the first universities to admit female graduates to its degree programmes in 1878 before any of the British universities 47 Region specific stereotypes editUnited Kingdom and English speaking territories edit Cultural stereotypes edit British sociologists Mike O Donnell and Sue Sharpe studied British Asian students and came to similar conclusions regarding problems faced by Asian youths at lower class schools Whereas Black British students were respected and admired by their White British peers as macho Asian youths had trouble gaining this same kind of respect and status O Donnell and Sharpe found that many Asian youths are stereotyped as weaklings warriors or as a patriarch 48 The weakling stereotype found in the UK and English speaking territories refers to the idea that South Asians are conformists intelligent lacking in athletic ability and non confrontational 2 49 50 51 The warrior stereotype is growing in the United Kingdom 52 53 54 Some Brits stereotype Sikhs as warriors and Muslims as inbred 55 as opposed to the rest of the South Asian community who are generally viewed as Buddhist pacifists or intellects 56 57 The Warrior stereotype has become the replacement for the Thug stereotype During Colonial Era South Asian criminals were referred as thugs due to the presence of the Thuggee syndicate The word thug originates from the syndicate and was originally used as a term for South Asian criminals Due to the African American hip hop group adopting the name Thug Life the word thug is no longer associated with South Asian criminals Many South Asian youths are often caricatured as rebelling against a society which stereotypes them as a model minority as well as against their perceived strict upbringing 58 59 60 61 This has fed the stereotype that Pakistanis and Bangladeshis are more aggressive and form gangs They are then further stereotyped as having poor social skills being unable to speak to ordinary White British people and have poor listening skills 62 63 Since post 9 11 and 7 7 South Asian Muslims particularly those of Bangladeshi and Pakistani origin and in many cases of Indian origin have been stereotyped as anti Western and or extremists 64 65 This may have contributed to increased tensions with ethnic and religious groups in the West 66 67 68 In some cases even members of Hindu and Sikh community are stereotyped as terrorists in the West citation needed Following a number of high profile controversies about the proportion of men of South Asian heritage found to be involved in child sexual exploitation South Asian Muslims particularly those of Pakistani origin have often been stereotyped as sexual groomers 64 69 In literary studies critics such as Homi Bhabha and Rey Chow have theorized that cultural stereotypes prevail because they work through repetition and ambivalence easily shifting between contradictory meanings Thus in colonial culture the native or ethnic is stereotyped as sly and indolent lascivious and impotent 70 More recently scholars such as Mrinalini Chakravorty have considered how contemporary fiction from and about South Asia traffics in stereotypes 71 China edit Due to China s economic rivalry with India a large number of Chinese view India negatively with several stereotypes of Indians commonplace in Chinese culture 72 In 2012 Krish Raghav an Indian journalist stated that within China the notion of India and Indian ness is largely built on rumour and stereotype Raghav reported that for China s online community India is a combined construct of the character Rajesh Koothrappali from the sitcom Big Bang Theory the comedian Russell Peters images of overcrowded Indian train with people hanging off the sides and dead bodies floating down the river Ganges These stereotypes are frequently evoked with the descriptor disgusting The smell of curry is often used as a derogatory epithet Within the Chinese state media there is China s official line parroted in newspapers and TV news media of India as a rival India s woeful infrastructure is emphasised and connected to defects of democracy Historical documentaries on China Central Television paint Indians as soldiers of the British lumping them together with other imperialist powers 73 However many Chinese view Indian Hindus with positive attributes too due to historic connections through Buddhism and ancient cultural contact A commonly held view is that India is rich in culture but under developed 74 Malaysia edit Currently around 7 of Malaysia s population consists of Indians mainly from the Tamil ethno linguistic group of Southern India as a minority of a largely Malay population in Peninsular Malaysia There are many stereotypes concerning Malaysian Indians 75 Some of them include that Malaysian Indians are considered as heavy drinkers and robbers Malaysian Indians are also primely suspected of being members of gangster or terrorist organisations and sometimes become victims to false accusation 76 Racism still remains a major problem in Malaysia and some stereotypes have led to cases of public bullying and racially hurtful commentary such as being called a keling mabuk drunkard etc Singapore edit Around 10 of Singapore s population consists of Indians mainly from the Tamil ethno linguistic group of Southern India as a minority of a largely Chinese population There are also some 160 000 non skilled foreigners currently working in Singapore a majority of them are from the Indian subcontinent 49 A stereotype of Singaporean Indians is that the Indian body is lacking in athleticism 49 They are however the richest and most successful ethnic group in Singapore 77 with exceptional educational attainment rates 78 and low levels of poverty 79 Racism remains a minor problem in Singapore and some stereotypes have led to cases of public bullying and racially hurtful commentary such as being called a black tofu 49 Lower class foreign workers congregate in the Indian historical and now tourist enclave called Little India 49 Little India with its large concentration of Indians is not frequented by some Chinese Singaporeans because it is perceived as an alien space which is potentially threatening and dangerous 49 In 2013 a minor riot occurred in the area involving construction workers from Bangladesh Pakistan and India which helped fuel stereotypes of construction workers as being dangerous 80 Fiji edit Further information Indo Fijians In Fiji another country where large numbers of people of Indian origin were brought for agricultural plantation work over 125 years ago they are viewed in a manner different from some other parts of the world Sienkiewicz finds the stereotypes popular in Pacific Islands is that Indians are too materialistic caring only about money that while the Indians work very hard to attain financial success they refuse to share it People with origins in India are also thought in Fiji to be too private and lacking a culture of caring for larger families 81 Indians Sienkiewicz finds intentionally prefer to be in nuclear families living in isolated homes rather than communal joint families in koros villages Some she interviewed claimed Before we were in extended families but now we are all in nuclear families Just a small house their family and that s it Relatives come and they go they do not live in that house It is a better way of living Everyone s needs and wants are cared for Mostly by having nuclear families and not living in the koro village we find that there is less conflict less chance of conflict This preference for private and diligent life is a matter of significant ethnic stereotypes and conflicts in Fiji 81 Sienkiewicz suggests that the British incorporation of the ethnic separation model in Fiji while originally devised to help colonialists govern smoothly has had long term effects on the ethnic identities and mutual stereotypes between both Fijians and Indians in Fiji 81 The British had tried actively to separate and segregate the Indian and local community lest they not find among themselves the common hatred for the British which would prove fatal for them New Zealand edit A Massey University study finds that the ethnic minority of Indian descent are stereotyped but so are other ethnic groups However inter ethnic and stereotypes driven bullying of students of Indian descent was higher the students of Indian descent were least likely to retaliate report abuse to authorities or approach officials for assistance in prevention Stereotyped and bullied Asian Indians were most likely to accept suffering emotional trauma and ill health problems 82 Negative stereotypes for Asian Indians included being presumed as unfriendly cliquish unemotional weird snobbish uncivilized terrorists and cheap Many of these stereotypes did not lead to inter ethnic bullying but some did 82 United States edit Cultural prejudices in American schools edit Cultural stereotypes prevalent in American schools negatively impact students of South Asian origin in terms of social stress feeling dehumanized and their general sense of well being 83 American sociologist Yvette Rosser finds 84 that negative attitudes and images about South Asian cultures are taught in American schools or through the media and these misconceptions may color people s personal socialization experiences 85 Sensationalist news stories about India often reinforce preconceived ideas Social studies teachers can play a critical role in eliminating cultural prejudices but instead typically reinforce stereotypes about cultures different from their own and present biased information about Asians thereby losing the opportunity for deeper understanding In numerous interviews of students of Asian descent as compiled by Rosser individuals of Asian origin were asked the following questions 84 Describe any stereotypes and misrepresentations about India that were taught in America as fact Do you feel as a student of South Asian descent that your presence in the classroom had an influence on the manner in which the course materials on India or Asia in general were presented If Indian and South Asian topics were presented in your classes what ideas were emphasized Compare the coverage of South Asia with that of other areas of Asia Many Americans of South Asian origin who participated in the survey reported numerous stereotypes Some sample stereotypes reported by Rosser and others 86 87 include the following The presentation of South Asians is a standard pedagogic approach which runs quickly from the Cradle of Civilization contrasting the Indus Valley with Egypt and Mesopotamia on past the Aryans who were somehow our ancestors to the poverty stricken superstitious polytheistic caste ridden Hindu way of life and then somehow magically culminates with a eulogy of Mahatma Gandhi A typical textbook trope presents the standard Ancient India Meets the Age of Expansion Approach with a color photo of the Taj Mahal There may be a side bar on ahimsa or a chart of connecting circles graphically explaining samsara and reincarnation or illustrations of the four stages of life or the Four Noble Truths Amid the dearth of real information there may be found an entire page dedicated to a deity such as Indra or Varuna who admittedly are rather obscure vis a vis the beliefs of most modern Hindus A South Asian in America 84 India is considered as really dirty and the people not too intelligent Teachers and the textbooks generally approached Asia from a negative perspective and showed the desolate parts of India not the beauty Only lives of the poor were represented and the treatment of Asia showed only the problems Students never learned that in India there is a middle class made up of approximately 300 million consumers Another student complained that India is depicted as just a poor country and that the lives of the people are dealt with in a simplistic manner A woman born in the United States who went to high school in Dallas 84 Rosser notes that the stereotypical discourse in much of the United States about South Asia is rarely devoted to economic development and democratic institutions in independent India India is not depicted as a viable political state People quickly make sweeping and flawed metaphysical assumptions about its respective religions and cultures but are far more circumspect when evaluating civil society and political culture in modern India It is as if the value of South Asia resides only in its ancient contributions to human knowledge whereas its attempts to modernize or develop are to be winked at and patronized After her own studies Rosser began to question the interpretations of some of the more well known leftist oriented scholars from India who dissect the nascent nation for whatever reasons along with their Western counterparts regularly demonize India s national urges deconstructing and disempowering individuals of South Asian origin Most people stereotype South Asians as if the nation is little more than Taj Mahal famine hunger population poverty Hare Krishna and Gandhi 84 88 Alternatively the stereotypes stress prejudices about Hinduism the caste system poverty third world country inferiority as if that is all India is One survey participant confided that the diversity of views and culture within India was not depicted accurately and only negativity was enforced we of South Asian origin are stereotyped as that we all starve eat monkey brains worship rats and cows It is as if every single individual in India is oppressed or oppressing others it is stereotyped as a backward country that treats their women poorly and kills their baby girls Checking for facts or reality is considered unnecessary Similar observations have been made by other scholars for both recent immigrants and second generation South Asian Americans born in the United States 83 86 89 In the minds of many Americans Rosser writes Indian women are to be pitied and the positive social progress made by many women in India is completely ignored 84 Despite the fact that women s right to vote other labor and civil rights in the United States took time in American history such facts are never contextualized or compared to the social and political uplift of modern Indian women The prevailing image is that if the unfortunate females of South Asia survive a deprived childhood they are likely to be burned in a dowry death after their forced marriage to a complete stranger Indian women are shown as downtrodden and powerless victims unlike American women who have more freedom Indira Gandhi is seen as an anomaly The numerous Indian women who every year join the colleges in America are also seen as anomalous Rosser notes that while India s religion and the caste system are emphasized in American discourse no mention is made of post independence secular India s efforts toward national integration of its minorities No mention is made of laws and efforts against discrimination or the country s 60 year effort towards active inclusion of scheduled caste and scheduled tribe population in educational and employment opportunities People also forget to introspect the fact that social discrimination and prejudice has been a widespread worldwide issue for example the treatment of African Americans in southern United States 84 Outsourcing offshoring call centres edit Barack Obama has said that the prevailing stereotype being cultivated against Indians in the United States is that all U S jobs are being outsourced to India and the stereotype is adversely affecting India United States relations 90 He also commented that such stereotypes have outlived their usefulness 91 and ignore today s reality Obama said Trade between our countries is not just a one way street of American jobs and companies moving to India It is a dynamic two way relationship that is creating jobs growth and higher standards in both our countries 92 Consequences editStereotypes of South Asians have been found by scholars to be dehumanizing making them more prone to mistreatment and crime 50 93 94 Many of the stereotypes were created by the British who ruled and oppressed to dehumanize the people to exert a greater control of the population They promoted a negative view of the subcontinent and its inhabitants which unfortunately still exists to this day and has been since carried forward by the present Western Media As reported in cases of other stereotyped ethnic groups scholars also confirm the phenomenon of stereotype threat in South Asians a psychological process that increases anxiety while reducing the potential performance of South Asians and their ability to productively contribute 51 94 The constant presence of a social or work environment filled with stereotypes has been found as a significant cause of depression and ill health 2 5 86 See also editNon resident Indian and Overseas Citizen of India Historical definitions of races in India Fresh off the boat Stereotypes of Jews Stereotypes of Americans Ethnic stereotype Man Like Mobeen Anti Indian sentimentReferences edit a b c Robert McDonald 2011 Making Vancouver Class Status and Social Boundaries 1863 1913 University of British Columbia Press ISBN 0 7748 0555 2 pages 206 207 a b c d e Rahman and Pollock Acculturation Competence and Mental Health Among South Asian Students in the United States Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development Volume 32 Issue 3 pages 130 142 July 2004 Hagendoorn L 1993 Ethnic categorization and outgroup exclusion The role of cultural values and social stereotypes in the construction of ethnic hierarchies Ethnic and Racial Studies 16 pages 26 51 John Berry 1997 Immigration Acculturation and Adaptation Applied Psychology An International Review 46 1 pages 5 68 a b c d Isobel Bowler 1993 They re not the same as us midwives stereotypes of South Asian descent maternity patients Sociology of Health amp Illness Volume 15 Number 2 pages 157 178 Wang Jennifer Siy John Oliver Cheryan Sapna 2011 Racial Discrimination and Mental Health Among Asian American Youth PDF In Leon Frederick T Juang Linda eds Asian American and Pacific Islander children and mental health Santa Barbara Calif ISBN 978 0 313 38300 7 OCLC 729636780 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ankita Rao The Persistence of Apu Why Hollywood Still Mocks South Asians The Slate May 7 2012 a b c Peter Claus et al 2002 South Asian Folklore An Encyclopedia ISBN 978 0415939195 Routledge page 109 How South Asian Americans Are Building a New American Dream National Geographic Society 4 September 2018 Marieke Jochimsen Deconstruction of Stereotypes Asian British Culture on Film and TV Westfalische Wilhelms Universitat MUNSTER Germany March 2008 Jorge Sanchez The South Asian Neighbour and Her His Stereotype Goes Global Universidad de Salamanca 2012 a b Navaratnam S 2011 Guilt Shame and Model Minorities How South Asian Youth in Toronto Navigate the Canadian Educational System MA Thesis University of Toronto Canada Richwine J 2009 Indian Americans The new model minority Forbes Magazine February 2 2009 Sarita Ahuja and Robert Chlala Widening the Lens on Boys and Men of Color AAPI amp AMEMSA PERSPECTIVES California page 12 June 2013 C N Le School of Education at Johns Hopkins University A Closer Look at Asian Americans and Education Johns Hopkins University 2010 Jowell and Airey 1984 British Social Attitudes Gower London ISBN 978 0566007378 a b Memmi Albert 1973 Portrait du decolonise Payot ISBN 978 2 07 034201 3 a b c Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez Postcolonial blues Ambivalence and alienation in the autobiographies of Richard Rodriguez and V S Naipaul PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2011 a b Citizenship and Immigration Canada Government of Canada 2009 a b Voyage of the Komagata Maru Echoes of Freedom Series University of California Berkeley 2009 see Media Representations of the Komagata Maru Incident Simon Fraser University 2010 The story documents and cartoons against Komagata Maru Canada Patricia Roy British Fear of Asians 1900 1950 in British Columbia Historical Readings Douglas amp McIntyre 1981 Trudeau gives Komagata Maru apology in House of Commons CBC News Canada s Trudeau makes formal apology for racist Komagata Maru incident The Washington Post Ludwig Tieck und die Bruder Schlegel Briefe Edited by Ludecke Frankfurt M 1930 Voltaire Lettres sur l origine des sciences et sur celle des peuples de l Asie first published Paris 1777 letter of 15 December 1775 Twain Mark 24 June 2004 Following the Equator Project Gutenberg Retrieved 7 February 2013 Aryans and British India Thomas R Trautmann Trautmann 1997 113 Grant Charles 1796 Observations on the state of society among the Asiatic subjects of Great Britain particularly with respect to morals and on the means of improving it written chiefly in the year 1792 Mill James 1858 2 109 The history of British India Leonard Gordon in Ainslie Embree and Carol Gluck Editors Asia in Western and World History ISBN 978 1563242656 Columbia Project on Asia M E Sharpe Inc pages 138 142 Trautmann 1997 117 H H Wilson 1858 in James Mill 1858 The history of British India Preface of the editor Bhabha Homi Of mimicry and man the ambivalence of colonial discourse October Volume 28 Discipleship A Special Issue on Psychoanalysis Spring 1984 MIT Press pages 125 133 Kopf 1980 Hermeneutics versus history Journal of Asian Studies 39 3 pages 495 506 Beckman Karen Redrobe 2003 Vanishing Women Magic Film and Feminism Duke University Press pp 31 3 ISBN 978 0 8223 3074 5 Beckman Karen Redrobe 2003 Vanishing Women Magic Film and Feminism Duke University Press pp 33 4 ISBN 978 0 8223 3074 5 Hall C From Greenland s icy mountains to Africa s golden sand ethnicity race and nation in mid 19th century England Gender and History 5 1993 pp 219 221 Kent Eliza F 2004 Converting Women Oxford University Press US pp 85 6 ISBN 978 0 19 516507 4 Kaul Suvir 1996 Review Essay Colonial Figures and Postcolonial Reading Diacritics 26 1 74 89 83 9 doi 10 1353 dia 1996 0005 S2CID 144798987 Webster Anthony 2006 The Debate on the Rise of the British Empire Manchester University Press pp 132 3 ISBN 978 0 7190 6793 8 a b c Ramdin Ron Arising from Bondage A History of the Indo Caribbean People Published by NYU Press 2000 ISBN 0 8147 7548 9 Carter Sarah 1997 Capturing Women The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada s Prairie West McGill Queen s University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 7735 1656 4 Reina Lewis Sara Mills eds 2003 Feminist Postcolonial Theory A Reader Taylor amp Francis p 444 ISBN 978 0 415 94275 1 Loomba Ania 1998 Colonialism postcolonialism Routledge pp 79 80 ISBN 978 0 415 12809 4 Reina Lewis Sara Mills 2003 Feminist Postcolonial Theory A Reader Taylor amp Francis pp 451 3 ISBN 978 0 415 94275 1 Sociology AS for OCR Stephen Moore Dave Aiken Steve Chapman Peter Langley ISBN 978 0 00 735373 6 pages 250 251 a b c d e f SELVARAJ VELAYUTHAM Everyday Racism in Singapore Proceedings of the Everyday Multiculturalism Conference of the CRSI 28 29 Sep 2006 Centre for Research on Social Inclusion Macquarie University February 2007 ISBN 978 0 9803403 0 3 a b Dixon L Ray L 2007 Current issues and developments in race hate crime Probation Journal 54 2 109 124 doi 10 1177 0264550507077251 S2CID 145107718 a b Katherine Woolf et al 2009 The effect of a brief social intervention on the examination results of UK medical students a cluster randomised controlled trial PDF BMC Medical Education 9 1 35 49 doi 10 1186 1472 6920 9 35 PMC 2717066 PMID 19552810 Summers Chris 25 May 2002 Tamils preying on Tamils BBC News Julian Kossoff 30 August 1998 East London s Bangladeshi street gangs agree to truce Independent The London Archived from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 18 July 2008 Walker Christopher 6 February 2003 Blood spilt for sake of honour and territory London Times Online Retrieved 6 February 2003 Rand Gavin March 2006 Martial Races and Imperial Subjects Violence and Governance in Colonial India 1857 1914 European Review of History 13 1 1 20 doi 10 1080 13507480600586726 S2CID 144987021 Islam in the UK 1500s present Before the 20th century Retrieved 17 February 2009 Bengali speaking community in the Port of London PortCities UK Retrieved 17 February 2009 Sangita Myska 16 January 2007 Why are British Asians turning to drugs BBC Retrieved 6 September 2008 Walker Christopher 27 February 2003 Butchers knives and samurai swords All cops are targets London Times Online Retrieved 6 September 2008 Keith Michael 2005 After the Cosmopolitan Routledge p 144 ISBN 978 0 415 34169 1 Troyna Barry Bruce Carrington 1990 Education Racism and Reform Taylor amp Francis p 30 ISBN 978 0 415 03826 3 J Kershen Anne 2005 Strangers Aliens and Asians Huguenots Jews and Bangladeshis in Spitalfields 1660 2000 Routledge p 247 ISBN 978 0 7146 5525 3 Kabeer Naila 2000 The power to choose Bangladeshi women and labour market decisions in London and Dhaka p 194 a b British Muslim Male Am I a stereotype BBC News 12 May 2017 Retrieved 29 March 2022 Chambers Stuart 2022 Islamophobia in western media is based on false premises The Conversation Retrieved 29 March 2022 Abbas Tahir After 9 11 British South Asian Muslims Islamophobia Multiculturalism and the State PDF American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences 21 3 MMU Psychology Journal Dissertations Mahamdallie Hassan 11 April 2015 Islamophobia the othering of Europe s Muslims International Socialism Young Chris 13 January 2019 Why are so many grooming suspects Pakistani men ask councillors Bradford Telegraph and Argus Retrieved 29 March 2022 Bhabha Homi The Location of Culture Routledge 1994 Chow Rey The Protestant Ethnic and the Spirit of Capitalism Columbia University Press 2002 Chakravorty Mrinalini In Stereotype South Asia in the Global Literary Imaginary Columbia University Press 2014 Why Chinese Hate Indians indiatimes com 19 October 2012 Retrieved 14 October 2015 In Beijing Indians are seen as stereotypes or not seen at all Raghav Krish 31 December 2012 Quartz Malhotra Aditi Zhong Raymond 18 September 2014 Chinese Views of India Culturally Rich but Backward WSJ Blogs India Real Time Retrieved 14 October 2015 10 Malaysian Indian Stereotypes That Needs To STOP TofuKicks 19 January 2018 Retrieved 13 August 2018 A Man Became a Terrorist Suspect After Someone Thought the Malaysian Flag Had ISIS Symbols 20 March 2018 Income by Ethnicity PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 September 2007 Education in Singapore PDF Archived from the original PDF on 30 September 2007 Poverty in Singapore PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 September 2007 migration 5 December 2014 Little India Riot One Year Later The night that changed Singapore The Straits Times Retrieved 15 October 2015 a b c Stephanie Sienkiewicz 2000 ETHNIC RELATIONS IN FIJI PEACEFUL COEXISTENCE AND THE RECENT SHIFT IN THE ETHNIC BALANCE Union College New York a b A Sobrun Maharaj The Social Acceptance of Visible Ethnic Minority Adolescents of Asian Origin in Auckland Secondary Schools Ph D Thesis Massey University Auckland New Zealand 2002 a b See Anju Kaduvettoor Davidson South Asian Americans Perceived Discrimination Stress and Well being Lehigh University 2010 Kaduvettoor Davidson Anju Inman Arpana G September 2013 South Asian Americans Perceived discrimination stress and well being Asian American Journal of Psychology Vol 4 3 Sep 2013 pages 155 165 a b c d e f g Stereotypes in Schooling Negative Pressures in the American Educational System on Hindu Identity Formation Teaching South Asia A Journal of Pedagogy 1 1 23 76 Winter 2001 archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Joseph Zajda 2004 Cultural transferability and cross cultural textbook development Education and Society 22 1 pages 83 95 a b c Das amp Kemp 1997 Between two worlds Counseling South Asian Americans Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development 25 1 pages 23 33 Nita Tewari and Alvin N Alvarez Editors Asian American Psychology Current Perspectives ISBN 978 0 8058 6008 5 Taylor amp Francis pages 321 325 Rukmani T S 1998 International Conference on the Hindu Diaspora A Review International Migration Review 32 1 pages 227 230 Inman et al Bereavement and coping of South Asian families Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development 35 pages 101 115 Obama Stereotypes shadow U S Indian trade relations USA Today 8 November 2010 Obama strikes out at outsourcing stereotypes Archived from the original on 19 January 2013 Retrieved 11 January 2011 Nichols Hans Goldman Julianna 6 November 2010 Obama Visiting India Promotes Trade Democracy on First Asia Tour Stop Bloomberg Sam Lewis et al 2005 Race and Probation ISBN 978 1843921431 pages 205 214 a b Crisp R J Turner R N 2009 Can imagined interactions produce positive perceptions Reducing prejudice through simulated social contact American Psychologist 64 4 231 240 doi 10 1037 a0014718 PMID 19449982 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stereotypes of South Asians South Asian stereotypes in the Vancouver press Doreen M Indra Ethnic and Racial Studies Journal They re not the same as us midwives stereotypes of South Asian descent maternity patients Isobel Bowler Sociology of Health amp Illness Journal Cultural stereotypes of women from South Asian communities mental health care professionals explanations for patterns of suicide and depression J Burr Social Science amp Medicine Journal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stereotypes of South Asians amp oldid 1186575976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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