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Article Dans Une Revue Transtext(e)s Transcultures : Journal of Global Cultural Studies Année : 2017

Dirty, Diseased and Demented : the Irish, the Chinese, and Racist Representation

Résumé

The alien, the foreigner, the outsider have been historically represented as unclean, sick, contagious, and mentally unsound. In the nineteenth century, the British and American imaginaries framed both the Irish and the Chinese in such terms, even though it was primarily the Irish who staffed Britain’s imperial armies, and the Chinese who manned its merchant ships, washed it sailors’ clothes, and dug its trenches. The sexual union of both Irish and Chinese with British or American women was particularly feared, and the hybrid child seen as especially mentally unstable and undesirable. The discursive and institutional treatment of “the Irish” and “the Chinese” was not an isolated practice, and would be reapplied to other ethnic groups in both the USA and the UK right into the present century, as the UK Home office’s treatment of the British citizens of Caribbean origin has illustrated.

Dates et versions

halshs-02069485 , version 1 (07-07-2019)

Identifiants

Citer

Gregory B. Lee. Dirty, Diseased and Demented : the Irish, the Chinese, and Racist Representation. Transtext(e)s Transcultures : Journal of Global Cultural Studies, 2017, The Other’s Imagined Diseases. Transcultural Representations of Health, 12, ⟨10.4000/transtexts.1011⟩. ⟨halshs-02069485⟩
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