But experts and campaigners argue that it is no coincidence that six of the eight victims were Asian women. And the suspect’s views, they say, are rooted in a false history and stereotypes that are too familiar to Asian and Asian American women.
The way their race transcends their gender puts Asian and Asian American women at risk of violence, said Sung Yeon Choimorrow, executive director of the nonprofit advocacy group of the Asian American Women’s Forum. Pacific.
And those factors came together this week in a dangerous, and ultimately deadly, way.
These ideas are rooted in U.S. history
The attitudes of Asian and Asian American women can be traced back as submissive, hypersexual and exotic men centuries ago.
Rachel Kuo, an ethnic scholar and co-director of the Asian Asian Feminist Confederation of America, describes legal and political measures throughout the country’s history that have shaped these harmful views.
The U.S. empire has also played an important role in these views, Kuo said.
All of those ideas “have been used to apologize and suffer violence by noticing, dismissing and normalizing,” Kuo said.
They have had an economic impact on Asian women
These stereotypes also feed into perceptions of “Asian women as free and disposable workers,” Kuo said, making them economically vulnerable.
And many Asian American women work in service industries, such as beauty salons, hospitality and restaurants.
“The statement will be lost because we have seen it as the ‘minority model,’ where they think we are all lawyers and doctors and engineers, but look a little more into it. depth and many of the women in our community work in a face – to – face service based departments, “Coimorrow, of the American Pacific Women ‘s Forum.
Other plaintiffs also noted the recent employment situation of victims.
Massage parlor workers and sex workers are particularly at risk, according to Esther Kao, organizer with Red Canary Song, a New York-based gathering of Asian and Asian American advocates for massage parlor workers and sex workers. sex work.
She said that not only do these workers have a stigma, but they are also migrants. Some may be afraid to export if authorities investigate violence or crimes against them.
It’s also important to remember that not all massage businesses provide sexual services, Kao said. Praising the amount, as did the suspect in the Atlanta area attacks, is a “racist assumption,” she said.
“It particularly connects to the fetishization of an Asian woman,” Kao said.
They are reflected in the violence seen today
Organizations that monitor violence and harassment against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders say their data shows that women are being unfairly affected.
Despite these conclusions, the extent to which Asian and Asian American women are particularly vulnerable to hatred and violence often goes unnoticed, Commorrow said.
“We get invisibilized when we talk about crimes against Asian Americans,” she said.
“It’s really time to have a full conversation about our unique experiences and challenges, because of how society sees us specifically with this racial, gender lens.”
What is needed to address this problem is a systematic approach that recognizes the dangers facing Asian and Asian American women, Coimorrow and others said.
With so much being neglected in Asian and Asian American women, the kind of violence seen in these recent attacks could happen again.
CNN’s Caitlin Hu contributed to this report.