Yellow cab (stereotype)

Yellow cab (stereotype)

is a term referring to an ethnic stereotype of Japanese women, and by extension other Asians, suggesting that they are sexually available to foreign men. The term combines the use of "yellow" to refer to Asians and the image of a yellow taxicab which can be "ridden at any time." It specifically refers to wealthy women who travel overseas or to foreign enclaves in Japan seeking to meet foreign men. [Turner 2000: 9] The term is believed to have been coined by the targets of such women in the late 1980s, but it was quickly appropriated by the Japanese media as a way of sensationalizing and censuring the women's behaviour. [Kelsky 1996: 173]

Social context

The "yellow cab" phenomenon can be observed in so-called "border regions" consisting of highly transient ethnically and culturally mixed populations. One scholar studying the "yellow cab" listed the Roppongi district of Tokyo, United States Forces Japan bases in locations such as Yokosuka, Yokota, Misawa, Iwakuni, Sasebo, and Okinawa as possible locations in Japan, and Hawaii, New York, and the west coast in the United States. [Kelsky 1996: 177] Sources disagree as to the question of power in these relationships. One argument analyses the phenomenon in terms of consumer patterns: the women are in the financially superior position due to the strength of the Japanese yen and their own disposable income, and are using their power to purchase sex; one such woman even described her foreign boyfriends as "pets". [Kelsky 1996: 178] [McLelland 2003: 3] The opposing argument puts the phenomenon in the context of a larger "romanticization and eroticization" of the West and specifically of English speakers by Japanese women, and asserts that it is actually the Western men in such relationships who have power. [Piller and Takahashi 2006: 59-61] However, the phenomenon is not limited to the West; some women also seek out local tour guides in Bali and Thailand as "holiday lovers". [Ma 1996: 67] Women engaged in these activities sometimes assert that it is no more than a female reflection of the much larger phenomenon of Japanese men's sex tours to foreign countries; some scholars agree with this self-assessment, bluntly referring to such women as "female sex tourists". [Marling 2006: 98] [Kelsky 1996: 178-179] In terms of the women and their relation to Japanese society, some authors describe the women's taking-on of foreign partners, especially men of African descent, as "socially, economically, and politically liberating" and a threat to Japanese men; others point out that the pursuit of foreign men was neither a permanent rejection of Japanese patriarchy nor of Japanese men themselves, and that many women engaged in such relationships eventually went on to marry Japanese men. [Kelsky 2001: 139-140]

Coverage in Japanese media

Coverage of the "yellow cab" phenomenon was noted as early as 1987, but it received a major boost from Shōko Ieda's 1991 publication of her book "Yellow Cab", which featured interviews and reporting on young Japanese women overseas. [Ma 1996: 62-63] (Her research assistant George Sarratt later denounced major portions of the book as fraudulent.) [Kelsky 2001: 139] Television broadcasts on the phenomenon especially focused on relations between black men and Japanese women, and the stereotypically perceived danger of being infected with AIDS; Japan's TV Asahi aired a segment on the subject in 1992 which included several staged scenes; Tokyo Broadcasting System followed up with a 90-minute documentary in 1993. [Cooper-Chen 1997: 213-214] The use of the term by Japanese men has been described as "reverse orientalism". [Turner 2000: 9] However, the controversy itself was used by women's media to engage in critique of Japanese male behaviours; such critique was often characterised by "relentless denigration" of Japanese men, as in Makiko Iizuka's 1993 book, "The Guys who Can't even Hitch a Ride on a Cab". [McLelland 2003: 4-5] Women labelled as "yellow cabs" have also been known to reappropriate the term as a mark of pride; in particular, Amy Yamada is "notorious" for using her work to "flaunt" her image as a "yellow cab", a trend that was apparent in her work even before the emergence of the "yellow cab" stereotype, as in her 1985 book "Bedtime Eyes", which won that year's Bungei Prize. [Kelsky 1996: 174] [Marling 2006: 98] Japanese hip hop artist Hime, the self-described voice of the "Japanese doll", also turns the stereotype on its head, stating that being a "yellow cab" means that the woman is in the "driver's seat". [Condry 2006: 177-178]

In response to the negative media coverage, Japanese female professionals in the New York City area organised the nihongo|"Group to think about yellow cabs"|イエローキャブを考える会|Ierō Kyabu wo Kangaeru Kai; they asserted that the image of Japanese women overseas had been damaged by the media and that the phenomenon was nowhere near as widespread as the media coverage attempted to portray it to be, and sought to combat the negative coverage. [Ma 1996: 65] The protest group also questioned whether the term was truly widespread in the United States, as the documentaries claimed; one telephone survey of 200 people they conducted in the New York area did not find a single individual familiar with the use of the term "yellow cab" in this sense. [Cooper-Chen 1997: 213-214] Scholars studying their activities described their attempts to deny or downplay the phenomenon as an "image battle", and one which they lost; women returning to Japan from studying or working overseas often reported that they suffered insulting insinuations about their sexual behaviour. [Kelsky 2001: 139-141] The group continued to be active until late 1993; they were later criticised for their "legacy of denial and disavowal of the possibility of Japanese women's racialized desire for foreign men". [Kelsky 2001: 142] The reporting on the phenomenon in Japanese media was generally supplanted in the mid-1990s by a "new panic" regarding women's sexuality, specifically the "enjo kōsai" (compensated dating) phenomenon. [McLelland 2003: 9]

See also

* Asian fetish
* Stereotypes of East and Southeast Asians

References

Notes

Sources

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