“What are you?” Major Minority Issues

As a visible minority (or majority) and racially-hybrid Canadian (aren’t most of us?), I get this question all the time. “What are you?” As though I’m some sort of unicorn, or another anomaly in the system. The other question I get is, “where are you from?” And the answer, although it is true, isn’t Canada, at least it isn’t the answer these people want to hear. I’m always reminded of the brilliant video written by Ken Tanaka titled: What Kind of Asian Are You?

After reading Fred Wah’s Diamond Grill I found myself analyzing these questions more critically from the viewpoint of my own narrative. How do I feel when people probe me for my racial ancestry, completely disregarding my conception of my own identity? Is it still insulting when the comments take a turn towards, “Oh, interesting. Mixed kids are always the cutest,” or am I frustrated only because issues of race and hybridity are sensitive to my generation, who were told growing up not to see colour?

I want to brush these comments aside, to think about them as much as I would if someone asked me about my hair or the weather, but I can’t. The commodification of mixed race kids as “cute” and “ethnic” is patronizing, and we shouldn’t be reduced to qualities that arise from our parents being born of differing colours and cultures. This isn’t to say that someone asking “What are you?” is intending to be racist or antagonizing. It only means that they are ill informed, misunderstanding, and only aware of the difference between us.

While I want to avoid blubbering on about my own experiences, I do want to use them as a springboard for a discussion on race issues and the need for alternative narratives, such as Diamond Grill, that contain race, that understand the major issues, but do not revolve solely around race.

In Joan C. Williams’ article Dissolving the Sameness/Difference Debate: A Post-Modern Path beyond Essentialism in Feminist and Critical Race Theory, she argues for a move beyond the binary arguments of sameness and difference in regards to race, gender, social status, etc. She states, “A post-modern approach to difference highlights that each person is embedded in a matrix of social and psychological factors that interact in different contexts,” wherein people cannot be “essentialized” within social subsets according to ethnicity, race, sexuality, gender, hobby, or occupation, but rather are recognized for the complexity of their experience and not seen as only victims, but as other things as well.

I don’t believe Williams is repeating the mantra that we shouldn’t see colour, but rather the opposite, that we should recognize colour and understand the implications of the history of prejudice towards minorities and also acknowledge that these histories and experiences do not wholly define people. Carmen Carrera is a former drag queen super star of Rupaul’s Drag Race, and now a transgendered model for Elite modelling agency. In her interview with Katie Couric, she explains quite eloquently the complexity that goes beyond the “difference” of being transgendered (while having to skirt the insulting and embarrassing question about her “private parts”). She highlights the issues of perpetuating a single one-dimensional narrative of a minority group quite well.

It’s really personal…I would rather talk about my modelling stuff…showing people that after the transition there’s still live to live…I still have my career goals, I still have my family goals, I want to have more kids…I want to focus on that, rather than what’s down here…they always focus on the transition or the genitalia and I feel like there are more to trans people than just that.

In Diamond Grill Fred Wah jr.’s statement on page 39 also encapsulates the concept of complexity beyond race, although with much more anger. At first he lists all of the things that make him not Chinese, and goals he has set for himself to be more White, but then he finishes off by drawing attention to the differences that are being used against him.

Well fuck! I can’t even speak Chinese my eyes don’t slant and aren’t black my hair’s light brown and I’m not going to work in a restaurant all my life but I’m going to university and I’m going to be as a great a fucking white success as you asshole and my name’s still going to be Wah and I’ll love garlic and rice for the rest of my life.

Wah uses this duplicity in order to make the same point that Williams and Carrera are making: we can be white and Chinese, we can be black and gay, we can be transgendered and parents, we can be straight men and enjoy ice skating. There is no essential category any one person can fit into; we are too complex to sum our life narratives up through one string of experiences related to prejudice.

So “What am I?” I am Chinese, a dancer, British, a writer, French, a customer service worker, Irish, a student, Canadian, shy, Gay, a middle child, outspoken, and so much more than the colour of my skin or the “cuteness” of my hybridity.

 

 

 

“Peacocking” and Catharsis Through Social Media

New technologies invoke fear in many people, often because of distaste for the rapid exceleration of their integration in our lives and in turn, our dependence on them. Online social media, like facebook, are platforms that need no introduction to the general public of industrialized nations, and whose use has skyrocketed over the past decade. According to Steve Olenski at Forbes.com, social media use has increased by 800% in 8 years for U.S. adults who are plugged in to the wonderful World Wide Web.  But even if these figures are faithful, what do they actually tell us about why such high volumes of people are using social media?

“Peacocking” is a term that has caught my attention over the past year, especially since I am guilty of ruffling people’s feathers this way (forgive the pun), as I’m sure many of you are as well.  Peacocking, according to UrbanDictionary.com’s fifth entry is, ” The act of writing on someones facebook wall to make either yourself or your friend seem more fun/cool/witty/popular. It is often done with the intention of someone in particular reading it.” I think this term can be extended to any posts that promote ethos building, as Laura Owen at Paid Content wrote, “most people want to share content that makes them look good.”

This act of intentionally weaving a bit of narrative information into the social fabric is only natural. Whether the purpose of releasing the data is to appeal to envy, excitement, pride, or concern, it seems that the majority of what we post on our facebooks, twitters, instagrams, etc. is there to say, “HEY! Look at me, look what I’m doing/eating/listening to/reading/seeing/feeling, aren’t I interesting/better than you/worth listening to/worth your time?” In class we spoke of exigence, and the information we post online seems both to display a sense of urgency (our devices are equipped with so many bells and whistles) and to relay common narrative experiences that our friends, families, and peers can relate to.

While sometimes the act of sifting through all of your friends’ content is taxing (especially the grammatically and/or mechanically inept), and while many people fear the impact of technology on “real” face-to-face interactions, this type of social media release is important, and serves a cathartic purpose. I’m not suggesting that inviting all of your friends to play Candy Crush, or sharing a link to a video with a cat falling asleep in a watermelon are going to help you cope with life’s tough decisions, but sometimes a status update or a tweet that either directly or indirectly calls out for some attention might help you feel like someone, somewhere is listening to you.

With much embarrasement I admit that I can’t seem to find the link to support the following information, but I recall either reading an article or watching a video that claimed that when we tell someone we are doing something the regions in our brain that are activated are almost parallel to when we actually physically do that thing. The same can be said for when we “peacock” online, or when we call for help. If I am trying to make myself feel better by posting about my new job, or a high grade I receive on a paper, the narrative I am expressing does in some way come true for me, and acts as a cathartic release.

In tragedy, social media has been used to the same effect, although arguably with a much greater emotional and urgent degree. “Jim” at Face Of The Matter says something similar about the modern sensibility and urge to tweet and share our thoughts and feelings about disasters, death, and tragedies.

They are experiencing life–the bad part, yes, but still–they are alive and bursting at the seams with emotion and fear and dread and being able to talk about it is key to bouncing back from it. From being resilient. From recovering.

So that while sometimes it may seem insensitive to make public your thoughts regarding these situations, or to post pictures and videos of these events, it is natural and an essential part of a global grieving process.

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