
Asian American resistance to racism dates back to at least the 1800s.

Our real history as Asians in America defies this false narrative. It’s an image used not only to keep Asian Americans in their place but one that upholds white supremacy. The myth was born at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, deliberately juxtaposing Asians against other racial minorities. The model minority myth gets denounced on a regular basis lately, and many journalists, writers, and activists have analyzed and challenged the economic and class implications of the myth and the damage it does less privileged Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.īut there’s another insidious side to the model minority myth that needs the same unpacking and deconstructing: the narrative of the quiet and obedient Asian – the one who works twice as hard and neither complains nor challenges authority. First coined and promulgated in the mid-1960s by white Americans, the term referred to Japanese and Chinese Americans, focusing obsessively on their seeming success in the face of discrimination. No current narrative of Asian Americans is more closely tied to white supremacy and historic white nativist policies than the model minority myth.
Anthology and justice for all mitsuye endo series#
We close out our series by centering the story of Asian immigrants challenging racism through the courts and in many cases, winning and changing the course of American history.

Since we launched “ Write Back, Fight Back” two months ago, we have witnessed the power of words to name our struggles, reclaim our identities, and voice our power.

By: Karin Wang ( Asian Americans Advancing Justice
