Too often, attention to nonwhite groups is only as pressing as the injuries
that they have suffered.
https://www.nytimes.com/202121/02//opinion/anti-asian-violence.html
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/21/opinion/anti-asian-violence.html>

By Anne Anlin Cheng

Ms. Cheng is a comparative race scholar and author of “The Melancholy of
Race: Psychoanalysis, Assimilation, and Hidden Grief” and “Ornamentalism.”

A 23-year-old Korean woman in New York was punched
<https://abc7ny.com/assault-hate-crime-bias-attack-coronavirus/6003396/> in
the face last March and accused of having the coronavirus. More incidents
followed
<https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/23/us/chinese-coronavirus-racist-attacks.html>
as
the virus spread, with Asian-Americans being spat on, beaten, slashed,
even attacked
with chemicals
<https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2020/4/8/1935636/-NYPD-releases-video-of-masked-suspect-who-attacked-Asian-American-woman-causing-chemical-burns>
.

In response to pandemic-related violence like this, advocacy organizations
came together to document cases of harassment and vitriol against
Asian-Americans. Stop AAPI Hate received 2,800 reports in 2020
<https://secureservercdn.net/104.238.69.231/a1w.90d.myftpupload.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Press-Statement-re_-Bay-Area-Elderly-Incidents-2.9.2021-1.pdf>,
around 240 of which were physical assaults, and the AAPI Emergency Response
Network has received over 3,000 reports since it started tracking
Covid-specific hate incidents last year.

The violence has continued into the new year. In January, in San Francisco,
an 84-year-old Thai man died
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/12/us/asian-american-racism.html> after
being assaulted on the street; across the Bay, in Oakland’s Chinatown, a
91-year-old man was shoved to the ground
<https://abc7news.com/chinatown-push-91-year-old-pushed-to-ground-opd-suspect-oakland-attacks/10322263/>.
Some of these cases have made it to national news, but most haven’t. The
low profile of this wave of violence is a reminder of how racial violence
goes unexamined when it doesn’t fit neatly into the standard narrative of
race in America.

Racial violence in the United States is not simply Black and white, even if
it looks that way. Instead, it can reveal layered victimizations and
mediated enmity. The recent incidents of anti-Asian violence in the Bay
Area, in particular, highlight this: Some Asian-Americans were outraged by
the violence and demanded justice, but since the perpetrators in these
cases were Black, many others felt deeply uncomfortable with contributing
to the criminalization of African-Americans.



And here we come to the heart of the complexity of “speaking up” for
Asian-Americans. Thanks to the “Model Minority
<https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2017/04/19/524571669/model-minority-myth-again-used-as-a-racial-wedge-between-asians-and-blacks>”
myth — popularized in 1966 by the sociologist William Petersen and later
used as a direct counterpoint to the “welfare queen” stereotype applied to
Black Americans — Asian-Americans have long been used by mainstream white
culture to shame and drive a wedge against other minority groups.

They are always caught in a no-win position between whites and Black
Americans. They are thought to be “white adjacent,” but of course they can
never belong to the club. They are persistently racialized, yet they often
don’t count in the American racial equation. The central, though often
unspoken, question underlying all of this is: Are Asian-Americans injured,
or injured enough, to deserve our national attention?

To ask this question is to reveal something about how this country thinks
about a racial calculus based on damage and hierarchy. Asian-Americans
exist in a weird but convenient lacuna in American politics and culture. If
they register at all on the national consciousness, it is either as a
foreign threat (the Yellow Peril, the Asian Tiger, the Spy, the Disease
Vector) or as the domestic but ultimately disposable prism for deflecting
or excusing racism against other minorities.

This recent onslaught of anti-Asian violence can partly be attributed to
our former president, who spoke nonstop of the “Chinese virus” and even the
“kung flu,” but he could not have rallied the kind of hatred that he did
without this country’s long history of systemic and cultural racism against
people of Asian descent.

For our histories are more entangled than how we tell them. Few people know
that many of the same families that amassed wealth through slavery also
profited from the opium trade in China
<https://www.wbur.org/commonhealth/2017/07/31/opium-boston-history>; that
at least 17 Chinese residents were the targeted victims of one of the worst
mass lynchings in American history in Los Angeles’s “Negro Alley” in 1871
<https://www.lapl.org/collections-resources/blogs/lapl/chinese-massacre-1871>;
that America’s immigration policy and ideas of citizenship were built on
top of laws like the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act
<https://www.loc.gov/classroom-materials/immigration/chinese/exclusion/>,
which barred Chinese laborers from immigrating to the U.S. for 10 years; or
that the “Model Minority” myth veils how Bhutanese- and Burmese-Americans
experience poverty rates over 30 percent
<https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2017/09/08/key-facts-about-asian-americans/>
.



I think of James Baldwin’s words
<https://progressive.org/magazine/letter-nephew/>: “This is the crime of
which I accuse my country and my countrymen, and for which neither I nor
time nor history will ever forgive them, that they have destroyed and are
destroying hundreds of thousands of lives and do not know it and do not
want to know it.”

When it comes to Asian-American grief, do Americans want to know?

These past few weeks, it seems as if Americans have opened to a kind of
knowing. As I saw these recent incidents of anti-Asian violence unfold in
the news, I felt a profound sense of grief. But I also experienced
something akin to relief. Maybe, I thought, now people will start to
respond to anti-Asian violence with the same urgency they apply to other
kinds of racism.

But then I started to feel a familiar queasiness in the pit of my stomach.
Is this indeed what it takes? A political imagination (or, really, lack
thereof) that predicates recognition on the price of visible harm?

There is something wrong with the way Americans think about who deserves
social justice — as though attention to nonwhite groups, their histories
and conditions, is only as pressing as the injuries that they have
suffered. Racial justice is often couched in arcane, moralistic terms
rather than understood as an ethical given in democratic participation.

It seems crazily naïve to suggest that we ought to learn, value and want to
know about all of our countrymen out of respect rather than guilt. Yet
while legitimizing racial and cultural differences exclusively in terms of
injury may motivate reform in the short run, in the long term it feeds a
politics of tribalism that erupts over and over again.

Two decades ago, I wrote in my book “The Melancholy of Race” that “we are a
nation at ease with grievance but not with grief.” We still are. In the
desire to move past racial troubles — in our eagerness to progress — we as
a nation have been more focused on quantifying injury and shoring up
identity categories than doing the harder work of confronting the enduring,
ineffable, at times contradictory and messier wounds of American racism:
how being hated and hating can look the same; how the lesson of
powerlessness can teach justice or, perversely, the ugly pleasures of
power; how the legacy of anger, shame and guilt is complex.

Unprocessed grief and unacknowledged racial dynamics continue to haunt our
social relations. The discourse of racial *identity* has obscured the
history of American racial *entanglements*. And why is entanglement
important? Because the challenge of democracy is not about identifying with
someone like yourself (that’s easy to do) nor about giving up your
self-interest (that’s hard to ask). It’s about learning to see your
self-interest as profoundly and inevitably entwined with the interests of
others.



But is this a lesson Americans are prepared to hear?

Asian-Americans are tired of insisting that others care. The truth is that
few are listening. All we can do is to continue to tell our truths, to
know, even just for ourselves, that we are *here*. As the poet Rita Dove
wrote <https://poets.org/poem/heart-heart>, “Here, / it’s all yours, now —
/ but you’ll have / to take me, / too.”

Anne Anlin Cheng <https://english.princeton.edu/people/anne-cheng> is a
professor of English and American studies at Princeton.


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