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LGBTQ Spaces Say All Are Welcome. Asian Men Know Better
Photo courtesy of Cody Seiya. Design by Sam Donndelinger.Subscribe nowCody Seiya did not feel welcome in Provincetown.Is that for yellow pride? a man sneered at Seiya in the middle of Ptowns tea dance, referring to a yellow bandanna he was wearing around his neck.It wasnt the first time Seiya, a 33-year-old gay Asian American, had experienced racism from other queer men. Years earlier at Rage, a now-closed gay club in West Hollywood, another white man asked him what he was doing there.Its not Gameboi night, the man said to him, referring to the Asian-themed weekly party the venue hosted.Photo courtesy of Seiya.That was really the first time that I really felt some sort of divide, Seiya told Uncloseted Media. Were already such a marginalized community, and then to just marginalize even further; it was just really disappointing.Seiyas experience isnt unique. A 2022 report from The Trevor Project found that more than half of Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) LGBTQ youth reported discrimination based on their race and/or ethnicity in 2021. And another study from the Williams Institute found that nearly one in five AAPI LGBTQ adults do not feel safe in the U.S.This discrimination is a silent epidemic, according to Gene Lim, a researcher at the Australian Research Center for Sex, Health and Society.Theres a lot of shame around experiencing sexual racism, on top of the fact that its an inherently distressing situation, Lim told Uncloseted Media. That congeals into a sense of isolation.Feelings of exclusion take a mental health toll: 40% of AAPI youth seriously considered suicide in the U.S. in 2021, and 16% attempted it.Photo by Cody Kinsfather.Seiya says hes carried those instances of racism with him and that theyve impacted his self-perception in queer spaces.[It gave] this sense of otherness and discomfort whenever I was in a predominantly white space. Its still something I deal with to this day.Danny Maiuri, a 41-year-old queer Korean American man, says hes conscious of his racial identity when he visits Fire Island, a popular gay vacation spot on Long Island, N.Y.I remember times just getting asked the really basic Where are you from? And I just kind of explained, I live in New York, and then you get the But like, were you born here?A Long History of RacismRacism toward Asian people has permeated American society since the first Chinese immigrants arrived in California in the 1800s.Sexual racismor discrimination in romantic partner selectionis most common among men who have sex with men (MSM), according to Thomas Le, an assistant professor of psychology at Bryn Mawr College.A lot of what Asian American men report in the U.S. is some ostracization because of the elevation of white men, and masculinity and muscularity being prized, Le told Uncloseted Media.Lim says this fixation on whiteness stems from racialized hierarchies in queer spaces, where Eurocentric features are often favored over Asian features.Asian MSM [must] navigate a sexual field where the hierarchy of desire is really racialized, Lim told Uncloseted Media. And they can feel disadvantaged in a way that is insurmountable.Nineteenth-century immigration laws and cultural norms in the U.S. excluded Asian American men from participating in male-dominant professions like mining and field work. Instead, they assumed roles typically associated with women.This segregation fomented in the American mind an image of the Asian man as feminine and has translated into the racist stereotypes about body image and dating preferences of gay men.Asian men are often assumed to be bottoms or twinks or to have small penis sizes because of this emasculated image. And a 2011 analysis on race-based partner preferences among MSM found that Asian men were preferred by 12% of participants, a dramatic drop off from preferences for white and Black men, preferred by 52% and 48% of participants, respectively.Subscribe nowRacist Stereotypes and the Medias White Beauty StandardIn American media, Hollywood has reproduced caricatures of Asian people for years. Long Duk Dong, the Asian character in Sixteen Candles, was portrayed as sexually inept. Leslie Chows diction in The Hangover is heavily accented, and his nudity is the punchline of a joke with the implication that Asian men are sexually inferior.While media representations have shifted away from overtly racist caricatures, and have even centered queer Asian male relationships like in Boys Love anime, the absence of Asian portrayals in the media and the abundance of white characters have shaped attraction among a generation of queer people.Le says white, muscular men dominated popular media and defined what it meant to be attractive through the 1990s and 2000s.Representation is really important it has this really understated effect on the erotic habitus for a lot of queer men, says Lim, referring to the learned component of sexual desire. A lot of queer Asian men do grow up implicitly measuring themselves against a Eurocentric standard.This experience was a reality for Filipino American Kalayaan Mendoza in college.Growing up in a majority non-white neighborhood in San Jose, Calif., Mendoza had never compared himself with white people. But at UC Santa Barbara, a school where AAPI people composed less than one-fifth of the undergraduate student body, Mendoza remembers attempting to fit in by adhering to white beauty standards.[I was] trying to be as American as possible and not to be seen as the other, not to be seen as a perpetual foreigner, Mendoza, now 46, told Uncloseted Media. No matter how much I tried and no matter how many times I bleached my hair, no matter how many blue contacts I boughtI would never be white.I just remember feeling extremely depressed, he says. I almost dropped out.The pressure to assimilate to a white beauty standard is also ingrained in porn.Pornography is generally one kind of common avenue for young queer men to explore sexuality, says Le. Some develop racialized attractions based on that.White actors are far more frequently cast in porn than actors of color. Because of that, many queer men hold white people as the beauty standard.This is what Mendoza discovered when he attempted to decolonize his dating preferences, which he describes as unlearning his racial biases shaped by colonialism. He says he questioned why he was so attracted to whiteness even though he grew up around people of color. A lot of that was, quite frankly, because of the sexualized media or the porn.Photo by Cody Kinsfather.Seiya says he has experienced racism working in the porn industry.They just automatically assume that I am a bottom or submissive because I am Asian, he says. I just find it demoralizing and very limiting.Sex and DatingWhen it comes to dating, queer Asian men often find it difficult to decipher if they are being seen for who they are or if they are being fetishized.Dating apps compound these effects. The design of most platforms are such that users must make quick judgments based on minimal information on a users profile. Because of this, Lim says many users fall upon their prejudices.As a way to receive more matches or chats, some Asian men attempt to fit into stereotypes that paint them as effeminate, such as the lady boy or the femme boy.Gay men do this all the time, they try to embody an archetype, says Lim. And an archetype is fertile ground for someone to project their own fantasies onto.Maiuri says he constantly questions whether his sexual interactions are shaped by his own desires or if hes assuming a role based on preconceived notions.He feels that many men assume that all Asian men are bottoms and submissive, and he constantly asks himself, Am I fulfilling this role because this is what I actually enjoy? Or was this something that was just put on me and Ive adapted to?Although gay culture remains white-centric, there are signs of change.A lot of queer Asian American men actually are creating their own communities, says Le. [Theyre] really being intentional about finding a community with other queer men of color.Mendoza says that finding other queer people of color at college helped him to cultivate a positive self-image.Thats why, quite frankly, I feel like Im alive today, he says.Maiuri says that while often criticized as a boogeyman of the mental health crisis, social media is actually having positive effects in facilitating connections between young men of similar experiences and slowly providing more examples of queer Asian men.The good part of it has been that connection and kind of finding identity and finding examples online for some folks to find ways to navigate [their] identity, says Maiuri.Seiya has come a long way from that weekend in Provincetown. He recently returned to the gay vacation hotspot for its fifth annual Frolic Weekend, a queer men of color takeover event.That was really special to recontextualize the space for myself, Seiya says. We deserve to take up space instead of shrinking ourselves.If objective, nonpartisan, rigorous, LGBTQ-focused journalism is important to you, please consider making a tax-deductible donation through our fiscal sponsor, Resource Impact, by clicking this button:Donate to Uncloseted Media
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