This chapter explores ecomedia events such as the Kunshan and Tianjin chemical explosions in 2014–15 to offer a counter-politics to the discourse of Yellow Eco-peril, which depicts China's environmental crisis through a racialized Eco-Otherness. Proposing a methodological shift to media materialism...
journalism,news media- newspapers and magazines collectively Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc. Want to thank TFD for its existence?Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, or visitthe webmaster's page for free fun conte...
yellow perilThis paper explores a parallel between the 'yellow peril' imagery of pollution and danger used to characterize China historically and that found in contemporary media accounts representing Chinese-made consumer goods in the USA. A survey of newspaper reporting on two key events involving ...
Renewing Yellow Peril: North Korean antagonism in entertainment media More recently a trend of shifting this yellow peril trope from Chinese, Japanese, or any other Asian nationality to North Korean has appeared. Since the... K Koch,R Breuker - 《Asian Studies》 被引量: 0发表: 2014年 Framing...
Asian Americans have almost always been portrayed in mass media as stereotypes. Mid-19th-century articles and pamphlets warned white America of a Yellow Peril, a horde of Japanese and Chinese who would destroy US civilization, and this led to Asian villains in books and films that persisted thro...
From “yellow peril” to “model minority” Abstract:This Paper explores the Chinese American image transformation in American mainstream media from mid 19th to late 20th century:thought evolving from “yellow peril” to “model minority”,the Chinese American are still “the other”. Key words:...
There were plenty of orphans in potential peril once South Vietnam was overtaken by the Viet Cong, and wouldn't their lives be better if they had a chance to start anew in the United States? President Gerald Ford, acting on a plea from New York's Cardinal Terrence Cooke for ... ...
On 7 March, the two oldest newspapers in Australia, theSydney Morning HeraldandThe Age, published several pages on ‘the looming threat’ of China. They coloured the Pacific Ocean red. Chinese eyes were martial, on the march and menacing. The Yellow Peril was about to fall down a...
“Yellow Peril”originated during nineteenth century Chinese immigration to the west to build the Transcontinental Railroad. The resulting anti-Chinese sentiment led to many acts of violence and death. Eventually, it culminated in theChinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which made it illegal for Chinese la...
had a different reason: to make money. As his biographers note, “Conditions for launching a Chinese villain on the market were ideal […] The Boxer Rebellion had started off rumours of a Yellow Peril which had not yet died down. Recent events in Limehouse had ag...