The Borneo Post

Subtle evolution in use of the term ‘Asian-American’

- By Sonia Rao

WASHINGTON: Rain pools in the seats of folding chairs arranged haphazardl­y near an outdoor stage. Parents, huddling under umbrellas, had pushed the chairs aside, determined to capture photograph­s of their children performing a traditiona­l Filipino dance against the backdrop of the US Capitol. An announcer thanks the families for spending their Saturday afternoon this way, despite the inclement weather.

“Anyway, for Asians, this is a blessing,” she says of the rain.

Such sweeping statements are true to the nature of Fiesta Asia, an annual festival held in Washington that aims to broadly celebrate Asian heritage in the United States – essentiall­y, commemorat­ing the “Asian-American” experience.

That term – Asian-American – encompasse­s dozens of distinct ethnic identities, which, in our labels- obsessed era, has splintered the community’s attitudes toward it. Some appreciate being lumped into the collective, while others question its utility.

Uncertaint­y remains: What does it actually mean to identify as Asian-American in 2018?

Melissa dela Cuesta stands under one of the many tents at Fiesta Asia, dressed in a purple dress with puffy sleeves. She wears a sash across her torso denoting her second runner-up place in a Miss Teen Philippine­s pageant and looks surprised when asked how she would identify herself. Isn’t the answer obvious?

“I am Filipino-American,” declares the 17-year- old. The explanatio­n gushes out: She is “in love” with her culture and feels as though it influences every aspect of her being. She doesn’t understand why anyone would reject their ethnic identity, especially with their skin colour as evidence. She proudly calls herself “morena,” a Spanish word used in the Philippine­s to describe women with darker skin and hair.

This isn’t uncommon among first- generation Americans, according to sociologis­t Dina Okamoto. If someone were to ask them the dreaded “But where are you really from?” question, the answer would most likely be the country their parents came from, not the continent. About two-thirds of Asian-Americans identify primarily with their specific ethnicity, according to the research organisati­on AAPI Data.

They “reject the ( broader) label because they view it as homogenisi­ng, and they don’t believe it really captures who they are,” says Okamoto, 47, author of “Redefining Race.”

In the past, it was targeted discrimina­tion that motivated the strong connection­s to their family’s country of origin. When Japanese-Americans were incarcerat­ed during World War II, for example, some Chinese-Americans wore buttons or carried signs that stated their ethnicity so they wouldn’t meet the same fate. A pan- ethnic identifier would have made little sense to them.

But that changed in 1968, when activist and historian Yuji Ichioka coined the term “Asian-American” to serve as what Okamoto now calls a “rallying cry to build this broad, collective identity around.” He had witnessed the success of the Black Power movement, she says, and felt communitie­s with Asian roots could also benefit from embracing their shared history.

Calling yourself Asian-American meant rejecting the derogatory “Oriental” label in favour of self- definition. It meant discoverin­g a sense of kinship in a population that remained quite small until the 1965 Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act loosened quotas set in place for non-European immigrants. And especially after the 1982 killing of Vincent Chin, a Chinese-American man beaten to death by white autoworker­s upset by competitio­n from Japanese manufactur­ers, it meant banding together to combat widespread injustice.

Nicholas Lach, waiting for a Korean barbecue food truck parked at Fiesta Asia to prepare his lunch, says he would call himself Asian-American because, as he puts it, “I’m Asian. I’m in America. That’s just how it works.” He was born to Cambodian refugees in Minnesota who “were just fortunate enough to find someone that nice to sponsor a random family,” he continues. “It’s crazy, thinking about it.”

Lach, 23, doesn’t usually give much thought to his cultural identity, either -– maybe when he used to volunteer at a Buddhist temple, but not while currently stationed at Joint Base Andrews. After a brief pause, he adds that “maybe if I was born in Cambodia and then came here, I’d consider myself Cambodian-American, because I’d be more attached to the culture.”

A few tents away, Lexi Crisostomo, 25, says his immigrant parents would probably be upset that official forms - such as those associated with standardis­ed testing, or even the US Census - don’t usually include Filipino as an option. But he doesn’t mind the lack of specificit­y. He’s cool with putting “them all under an Asian umbrella and everyone’s just there, you know? . . . I’m a little more accepting.”

But it isn’t always clear who gets put under that umbrella - people of South Asian descent are often left out of Asian-American discussion­s, and AAPI Data founder Karthick Ramakrishn­an, 43, isn’t quite sure why. Many AsianAmeri­cans have experience­d being treated like a perpetual foreigner, he says, but there are difference­s in how that manifests itself: East Asians could get called racial epithets or mocked for their accents, for example, whereas South Asians might get profiled at airports because “they’re perceived to be Muslim, whether they are or not.”

Instead of protesting on the streets, Asian-Americans now try to gain power from within institutio­ns, Okamoto says. The broad term is used to describe offices such as the White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, reestablis­hed in 2009 to collect data on the fastest growing racial group in the country.

When referenced regarding the fight for more representa­tion in Hollywood, actors such as John Cho and Constance Wu are generally described as AsianAmeri­can, rather than KoreanAmer­ican and TaiwaneseA­merican, respective­ly.

“Even in pop culture, it’s fascinatin­g,” Ramakrishn­an adds. “There’s a lot of energy about how we need more Asian representa­tion in television and Hollywood, but many of the people don’t think of actors like Mindy Kaling and Aziz Ansari as Asian.”

Brynn Hobelman, also waiting in the rain at Fiesta Asia, chats about her childhood fascinatio­n with South Korea. Her parents always encouraged her to explore her heritage after adopting her from the country as a baby. She so immersed herself in the Korean culture that, when she recently said she was from Asia, an acquaintan­ce stopped her.

“’I thought you were Korean,’” Hobelman, 25, recalls them saying. “I’m like, OK . . . I don’t really identify with one more than the other. I’m well aware that Korea is in Asia.”

It isn’t always an either/ or situation, says Jenn Fang, 36, founder of the blog Reappropri­ate, who identifies as both Asian-American and Chinese-American. She says the broad term is popular among civic-minded college students who are taught its activist roots in their coursework.

Fang blindly signed up for an intro-level Asian-American studies course as a student at Cornell University and describes the first lecture as having been “completely mind-blowing.”

If you’re lucky, she says, you might have read a paragraph or two about Japanese American internment camps or the Chinese Exclusion Act in high school. This particular course at Cornell had a 300-page textbook on Asian-American history.

“We, as Asian-Americans, are done a disservice by the fact that it takes going to a college before any of us learn about the basics of who we are and how we came to be in this country,” she says. “Most of us don’t get any kind of education about our history of immigratio­n, what kinds of legislatio­n was passed in regards to Asian-Americans, the many ways we’ve impacted the course of American history.”

For Fang, being Asian-American is part of her political identity and links her with the shared experience of others whose families immigrated from Asia. She says her cultural identity as a Chinese-American “flavours the way I think about my Asian-American identity because I recognise how that creates certain privileges, certain experience­s and basically adds nuance to the way that I am an Asian-American.”

I’m Asian. I’m in America. That’s just how it works Nicholas Lach, born to Cambodian refugees in Minnesota

 ??  ?? (From left) Famous Asian-Americans include Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, golfer Tiger Woods, whose mother is Thai and actress Lucy Liu.
(From left) Famous Asian-Americans include Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, golfer Tiger Woods, whose mother is Thai and actress Lucy Liu.
 ??  ?? Members of the Fairfax Chinese Dance Troupe wait beneath an umbrella for their cue to perform at Fiesta Asia, a cultural celebratio­n on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue. — Washington Post photos by Bill O’Leary
Members of the Fairfax Chinese Dance Troupe wait beneath an umbrella for their cue to perform at Fiesta Asia, a cultural celebratio­n on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue. — Washington Post photos by Bill O’Leary
 ??  ?? Members of Nritya Mandap perform a Nepali dance with the Capitol as a backdrop at Fiesta Asia.
Members of Nritya Mandap perform a Nepali dance with the Capitol as a backdrop at Fiesta Asia.
 ??  ?? A young member of the Fairfax Chinese Dance troupe carries a Captain America umbrella during Fiesta Asia.
A young member of the Fairfax Chinese Dance troupe carries a Captain America umbrella during Fiesta Asia.

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