Contagious Minorities: Chinese Canadians during the COVID-19 Pandemic

被引:4
|
作者
Chakraborty, Chandrima [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] McMaster Univ, Dept English & Cultural Studies, Hamilton, ON, Canada
[2] McMaster Univ, Ctr Peace Studies, Hamilton, ON, Canada
[3] McMaster Univ, Global Peace & Social Justice Program, Hamilton, ON, Canada
关键词
COVID-19; Chinese Canadian; anti-Asian racism; Royal Commission on Chinese Immigration; immigration policy; disease; race; pandemic; minority;
D O I
10.3138/jcs-2022-0017
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Canada has witnessed a sharp increase in racial violence against Chinese Canadians, and, in an undifferentiated racism, other Asian Canadians have been seen as bearers of disease as well, which often made them targets of racism. The quick transformation of Asian minority groups into threats of contagion during the pandemic points to the persistence of latent fears and anxieties about Chinese Canadians across generational differences, immigration status, and national origin. This essay reflects on how knowledges about early Chinese newcomers that were generated by colonial administrators laid the foundations for modes of racial governance that continue to inform public policy and public discourse in multicultural Canada in ways at once familiar and new. It examines the 1885 Report of the Royal Commission on Chinese Immigration as an important tool in reinforcing the political goal of "white Canada" by strengthening the power of European colonists. Less than a century later, in 1967, the immigration points system was introduced, preceding the adoption of multiculturalism policy in 1971, both breaking with explicitly racist national policies. Yet there is more continuity than there are differences across the 1885 Report and the 1967 immigration policy. Both participate in a historical narrative that excludes the Chinese from national imagining, laying fertile ground for contemporary anti-Chinese racisms during the recent COVID-19 pandemic. Contemporary media narratives during the pandemic reproduce the same racial hierarchies, excluding Chinese Canadians from the nation. By placing the rise in anti-Asian racism during the COVID-19 pandemic in the long historical trajectory of institutional racism in Canada, this essay argues for the need to learn about the historical legacies of racism to be able to intervene in structural racism so that Canada's promise of multiculturalism can be grounded in justice and equity.
引用
收藏
页码:393 / 409
页数:17
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