
Is Lighter Better?: Skin-tone Discrimination Among Asian Americans: Skin-tone Descrimination Among Asian Americans
Author(s): Joanne L. Rondilla (Author), Paul Spickard (Author)
- Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers (UK)
- Publication Date: 28 Dec. 2006
- Language: English
- Print length: 158 pages
- ISBN-10: 0742554937
- ISBN-13: 9780742554931
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Rondilla and Spickard deftly expose the unacknowledged but pervasive phenomenon of colorism in Asian American communities. Their brilliant and complex analysis goes beyond the Black/White racial paradigm and covers a broad range of topics including family pressures to be light, class status, the use of skin lighteners, and cosmetic surgery. The analysis is daring and pathbreaking. This is, unequivocally, the most comprehensive and sophisticated book on this issue to date. — Margaret Hunter, Loyola Marymount University
Is Lighter Better? breaks new ground to explore the many ways that colorism profoundly influences Asian Americans, especially women. Relying upon in-depth interviews and survey data with individuals from many Asian communities, the authors skillfully link the desire for lighter skin and ”sharp” [European-like] facial features to systems of racial domination and status inequalities that equate dark complexion with a peasant past. Complicit in fostering colorism is the beauty industry, which promises that skin lighteners and cosmetic surgery to alter Asian features―to look more White―solve all problems. Replete with rich examples and keen insights, this book is essential reading for anyone interested in the complexities of color hierarchies. — Verna M. Keith, Arizona State University
This is a riveting book, which reveals the complex issue of colorism in the Asian Pacific Islander American community. People are caught between assumed hegemonic Whiteness and challenges to authenticity because they may not be ”Asian looking enough.” Colorism strikes at the very core of what it means to be Asian American today. Is it just ”self hate” that motivates some to whiten their skin, straighten their hair, or have eyelid surgery? Is Lighter Better? exposes the unspoken assumptions of colorism in some Asian Pacific Islander communities and brings to light complex bodily negotiations and hierarchies of acceptance based on race, class, and gender appearances. The answers may not always be as they appear. — Rebecca Chiyoko King-O”Riain, author of Pure Beauty: Judging Race in Japanese American Beauty Pageants
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