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Viewpoints
Friday, 08 October 2010

Have the Chinese lost face over the Morrissey “subspecies” comment?

by Sonny Leong, Publisher and Chair, Chinese for Labour
October 2010
 
In an interview in the Guardian Weekend magazine recently, Morrissey, former singer of The Smiths, describes Chinese people as a "subspecies" because of their treatment of animals.
 
The response of the British Chinese community was deafening silence. Can you imagine the fuss if Morrissey had made such comments about Indians, Africans, or Jews? There would be uproar, marches down Parliament and demonstrations across the land. So where are the Chinese protests or demonstrations? Nowhere. Absolutely zilch! Have we lost our face over this comment?
 
Why do the Chinese complain so little? Where are the Chinese business and community leaders defending their values and pride? Why is no one from the community standing up to the authorities to insist that this sort of behaviour is totally unacceptable?
 
Anna Chen, performer, writer, and broadcaster who blogs as “Madam Miaow” (www.madammiaow.blogspot.com), and is often the sole British Chinese commentator to protest against not only Morrissey's statement, but also the intensifying prejudice emerging in the liberal media, says:
 
        There's been a wave of anti-Chinese Yellow Peril fever whipped up coinciding with the rise of China as a superpower, surfacing in sensationalist scapegoating every time there's a disaster. They've attempted to stick us with the Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak in rural England, the Gulf Of Mexico BP oil leak, even climate change when the West has been belching out carbon emissions for 160 years since the industrial revolution and look set to continue doing so at four times per capita that of the Chinese.
 
She has been criticised by the mainstream media in her fight against racism in the media. Here is what she says of the BBC's celebration of Fu Manchu:
 
        “Fu Manchu in Edinburgh” gleefully revived racist stereotypes of the Chinese I'd hoped were long-buried, and could have been subtitled, Racism for Fun.
 
        Why present a Yellow Peril figure as if he was a real person complete with lurid wallowing in the very worst racism, dehumanising the Chinese as a race, linking us with filth, and presenting us as Bin Laden-like Western-civilisation-hating sub-humans?

There was no irony. No attempt to subject these prejudices and stereotypes of a bygone era to any kind of modern interrogation. Instead, they were re-imported, intact, into the present day. I can't imagine the BBC vilifying any other minority group like this
 
        The author Sax Rohmer had never met a Chinese person and was writing from malice and ignorance — the "experts" on this programme only have one of those excuses.

There's a woeful absence of Chinese voices in the media, so when the BBC fills the vacuum with degrading Sinophobic depictions such as this one, they do a grave disservice to a significant licence-paying section of the population.
 
Professor Greg Benton of Cardiff University also commented:
       
        Chinese are quite numerous in British society today, but ethnic Chinese are very underrepresented in the BBC and its programmes, which is a disgrace. This was not a very funny programme, and if it was meant to be ironic, the irony didn't work. If you're a young Chinese isolated in an overwhelmingly white school and community, as many if not most young Chinese are, you get a lot of mockery along these lines. Why not commission more work on that? First deal with the racist stereotyping - then we can perhaps afford to be ironic about it.
 
The British Chinese number more than 450,000, the largest such community in Europe, and the third largest ethnic community in the UK. Yet no senior community leader has stood up to condemn such vile vitriol from a has-been musician in search of a headline.
 
What would it take for the Chinese community to rise up and challenge such racist statements? What would it take to make the Chinese angry enough to take to the streets to protest? Or are we, such a passive community that we will take whatever is thrown at us so that we can live ‘peacefully’ in our host country?
 
I say to my community and my fellow community leaders – enough is enough – if we do not stand up for ourselves no one will. We have let down our previous generations who had survived in racist environments and we will let down our younger generation and children for not having the principles and courage to stand up to such cowards.
 
We portray ourselves as hardworking, law-abiding and successful. We hide behind these norms for fear of misunderstanding. Peel the layers and selfishness, cynicism, exploitation oozes from the community pores.
 
When criticisms are made, accusations of betrayal and disloyalty are thrown at the maker. No wonder, nobody speaks up. If the community does not feel that it has a rightful place in society then that right will be taken away from them by people like Morrissey.
 
It has been suggested that all the Chinese care about is making money. Yes, make your money but remember there are higher values, too. You have your self esteem, principles, culture and, most importantly, pride. No amount of money is worth it if we let our pride and values slip – we will a forgotten community.
 
 
Comments
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Anonymous Posted 23:48 on 8 October 2010
I think its cos Chinese people just dont really care... or the fact most of them just havent heard of Morrissey....
Anon Posted 15:05 on 9 October 2010
It's true - there's an increasing amount of racism towards the Chinese people living in the UK right now - why? I can't quite seem to understand. Anyone have any reasons for this?
Bumble Bee - re: Anon's comment Posted 18:58 on 24 October 2010
As a former public service interpreter, I guess part of the reason is that more and more Chinese are breaking the law and then escaping, claiming benefits by fraud, being very loud, damaging the environment by littering, forming a ghetto and wouldn't integrate, etc. Chinese are becoming more conspicuous in the U.K. now due to the number of immigrants, many of them illegal. I have come across many of them who think that it is their basic right to come here and claim all sorts of benefits that they are not entitled to. It is because of them I quit working as a public service interpreter.
Normally, good, law-abiding people are not that noticeable; it's often the vile ones that stand out, hence the negative image.
slc Posted 18:22 on 11 October 2010
It's not fair to tar the whole community with the same brush. Being an ethnic minority will never be easy. The least we can do is "do what the Romans do in Rome" and integrate ourselves into the local culture, be it etiquette, language, career, music/arts etc. But at the same time avoiding the pitfalls leading to the fall of western society eg high divorce rates, drug problems, loss of family structure. Whenever I get any racially provoked remark, I enjoy watching the perpetrators stunned silence when I reply with a posh English accent just to take the mickey out of him (usually it's a he). If more of us stand up to the racist remarks I'm sure how we are viewed as an ethnic group would change.
Anon3 Posted 19:51 on 12 October 2010
The funny thing is that Lady GaGa purposedly dressed up in raw meat to collect her grammy awards shorty after Morrisey's silly comments. Morrisey is old news now and his fans are grown up and don't believe in his hype anymore.
I don't want to legitimise
racist comments, the thing about Morrissey is that he always makes these controverial comments (Queen is dead, Benegals in platforms etc) prior to a album release or tour which he messed up badly in his most recent one (allegedly tried to topped himself during a singing performance). As to why chinese ppl don't stand up for themselves is partly because they don't know how to or don't have the power to do so. So making money is only option where they feel that they have more control, its less risky nonetheless I totally argee with this writer's sentiments and if they real my respect is even more enchanced. Its also about CLASS differences in the chinese community itself, which put cultural barriers within the community, sort that out aswell.
Hu-man - race Posted 20:39 on 13 October 2010
My few Chilean pesos worth, alas there's not enough admirable proactive people like this writer who cares enough to try and make a difference for the chinese community. Race is one of the hardest subjects to argue and fight against, especially if you are the minority against the majority. Nowadays if you are really serious about the issues not just a flippant blog, you really have to do your homework and research and explore all aspects of the issues before putting it into the public in a more measured way, because there be people more clever than me who will spot them and exploit them for their own bizarre ideological interests. It s hard work actually not many people have that commitment or can be bothered. If there are incidents where "justice" is seen to be done, please report it (Talented Dimsum contributors)and tell us, for at least for morale sake. As always lets not forget all those who are just nice non-racist people, stick with them.
anon - who is he? Posted 11:04 on 6 November 2010
I personally have better things to do. It does anybody's head in to debate on unpleasant subjects. Sadly in today's global media there is an army of would be hopeful who can claim fame by jumping on band wagons or just being controversial. Just keep taking the tablets. People are just people regardless of their background.
Zhao - sub-species Posted 12:18 on 9 November 2010
While Morrissey might think the Chinese are a subspecies, I wonder how many Chinese think non-Chinese as subspecies.

Until little over a hundred years ago, people like Morrissey were termed in China as Oceanic Barbarians. According to my limited knowledge of Cantonese, such Oceanic Barbarians are referred to as Ghosts today.

Meanwhile, Japnese are referred to as Little Japs, Indians "A-San" (a reference to the Indian servants to addressed everyone as "sir"), Russians "Old Hairies", and so on.

Looking deep inside all of us, there is evil - it's just that some are better at hiding it than others. And I should think it's the unknown that is the most dangerous - those two-faced gentle people who control the upper strata of society, who greet you with a smile, including you as their servants but exclude you from power in a systematic and institutional manner, whether intentional or subconsciously.
Anonymous - race card again Posted 19:45 on 10 November 2010
the issue is also the tried and tested tactic of using the race card to market themselves towards presumably a more right-wing audience as a has-been LA tax exile Mr morrisey is desperately trying to do, to speak louder than relentless the X factor machine or music Top10. Shame that the poet Simon Arm-whatever switch off his critical facilities and didn't press him harder about these issues in the Guardian interview, which he usually does in late review. However there are a few other critics who were protested I can recall. The sad thing is that chinese are again seen as easy targets in the UK because "WE" appear to be relatively "harmless" and can't fight back. However one also has to be super media savvy because IF there were massive protests about Morrisey his record company will be laughing at the negative publicity and the likely increased record sales it would generate which is the only and real issue for them.
Lastly good on Harriet Harman quick response in dealing with the Woolas incident.
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