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Ten
Thousand Things
Multicultural Webfinds
"Ten
Thousand Things" is a Buddhist expression representing the dynamic
interconnection and simultaneous unity and diversity of everything in
the universe.
Global
Hapa: A Conversation with Kip Fulbeck
(Nina, March 25)
Kip Fulbeck,
known for his eye-catching popularization of “Hapa” identity
in the United States, has brought his mission to Asia with his groundbreaking
“The Hapa Project” — a collection of photographs accompanied
by personal, handwritten statements about identity of over 1,200 American
Hapas. Fulbeck turned his project into a book, Part Asian, 100% Hapa,
now available in Japan through amazon.jp. Kip’s new book Permanence:
Tattoo Portraits also explores identity “from the outside in,”
and will be released on amazon.jp in April.
The term “Hapa,” Hawaiian in origin, is a derivative of the
word “half” and signifies a part-Asian, part-Other ethnic
background. Despite objections from some Hawaiians who believe the term
only applies to descendents of
part-Hawaiian mixes, Fulbeck suggests the term is a useful
way for people of mixed heritage to explain themselves to anyone posing
the intrusive question, “What are you?”
Not only serving as an informal tag of identification, the term “Hapa”
has become a title facilitating solidarity between a wide and diverse
group of people —
Afroasian, Japanese
Hapas, and everyone
else under the mixed heritage umbrella. Factors such as colonialism,
globalization and, more recently, greater social tolerance, have resulted
in an increase of inter-marriages, thus an increase in Hapas in Asia.
In Hong Kong, Macau, India and other colonial cities, Eurasians
have long been a part of their societies. Attitudes towards Hapas have
changed dramatically since the early twentieth century when Anglo-Indian
actress Merle Oberon had to hide her Asian background to get ahead in
Hollywood. Nowadays, the former Princess Alexandra of Denmark appears
even more glamorous because of her Chinese-European ancestry.
In Japan, the Hiragana
Times counted 36,039 interracial marriages between
Japanese and non-Japanese in 2003. Quite naturally, these marriages have
resulted in more Japanese
Hapas. And the Japanese Hapa phenomenon is one of many shifts
that defies the postwar ideology of a homogenous Japan. In addition to
uncountable part-Japanese/part Asian mixes that make up Japan’s
heterogeneous population (part Korean actress Matsuzaka Keiko and part
Chinese Softbank Hawks manager Oh Sadaharu), Hapas in Japan are not difficult
to find — media star and Goodwill Ambassador Mari Christine, supermodel
Devon Aoki, pop singer Olivia, and sumo star Taiho Koki, among others.
The U.S., as well, is a
hub of part-Asian mixes, on the West and Northeast coasts.
Among more commonly-known Hapas are champion golf player Tiger Woods and
broadcast journalist Ann Curry, but other less obvious Hapas include Anthony
Brown (Berkeley percussionist and composer, Choctaw/African American/Japanese),
Johnny Damon (Boston Red Sox center fielder, White/Thai), and Tao
Rodriguez-Seeger (folk-rock musician, Japanese/Anglo/Puerto
Rican) grandson of folk music icon and human rights activist Pete Seeger.
Despite this, Hapas remain an underrepresented, even invisible minority
in the United States. Just a few decades ago, ignorance surrounding ethnic
hybridity has been a source of identity conflict for many Hapas. Kip Fulbeck
grew frustrated when asked over and over again in applications, surveys,
etc. to check the one box that describes his ethnic heritage. “For
me,” he says, “that was like saying choose mom or dad.”
So Kip made the book he wished he owned as a child, Part Asian, 100%
Hapa, which celebrates Eurasian/Amerasian/Afri-asian hybridity and
identity, doing away with the stereotypes attached to it and the “check
one boxes’s.”
A native of California, Kip is slam poet, artist, author, activist, and
film-maker who currently teaches Art for the Asian American Studies and
Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara
where he was awarded Outstanding Faculty Member four times. “The
Hapa Project” is a compilation of photographs and attached personal
statements of over 1,200 Hapas around the United States.
On March 10th his latest exhibition, “Kip
Fulbeck: part Asian, 100% Hapa” opened in New York
at the Asian/Pacific/American Institute of New York University. The Japanese
American National Museum’s “Discover
Nikkei" website helped sponsor this exhibition, as part
of its outreach to Nikkei and Hapa around the world. The multilingual
(Japanese, English, Portuguese, and Spanish) site is engaged in an open
and creative exploration of Nikkei (and Hapa) identity.
In this interview, Kip Fulbeck talks about Hapas in the United States
and Asia:
Nina Melendez Ibarra: Can you explain the Hapa identity
and how you’ve transformed a term that once insinuated impurity
to mean something positive?
Kip Fulbeck: The word “Hapa” comes from the
Hawaiian word “half” which is in itself a form of the English
word half… Originally used in the term “Hapa Haole,”
it referred to someone who was half white/foreigner and half Hawaiian.
At some point, it was a pejorative term, implying that one was not pure
but by the time I heard it in the early 1970’s, it had come to mean
someone who was part Asian/Pacific Islander and part something else. Many
people argue about what word means, but in terms of language, no one “owns”
anything.
Some people I’ve met tell me “Hapa” means only Japanese/Caucasian.
Others say it’s only Hawaiian/Other, etc. I just think it’s
a nice, casual way of describing being mixed. A lot less clinical than
Eurasian or Amerasian. And it has no pejorative attachment, like “Ainoko.”
What were your objectives and concerns that eventually brought about
“The Hapa Project?”
My main objective, selfishly, was to make the book I wish I owned when
I was a kid. I never knew anyone else like me, going through things I
went through, not fitting in, always having to choose sides.
I also wanted to give Hapas a forum to describe themselves in their own
words, and to choose their ethnicity in their own terms. Identity is a
personal process and I’m adamant that it should be a personal decision,
not one made by a community, a government or others.
Do you think that identifying oneself by one’s ethnic heritage
is negative or positive?
I don’t think of it as negative or positive… it’s what
it is. I think taken to an extreme it can be negative, as in ‘I’m
going to vote for Obama because he’s half African and I’m
part African.’ The problem is that the world identifies you by phenotype,
race, and ethnicity. I would love NOT to have to make this book, but the
reality is that every day people are looking at you and making assumptions
based on what box you fit in... and for multiethnic people, these boxes
are often blurry.
The boxes are there to categorize other people in order to simplify
social complexities; it’s a social mechanism. But why the “race”
category? And if the categorization of people is an inevitable social
impulse, how should we do it?
For the record, race is not a scientifically sound assumption. For example,
there is no DNA difference between human beings. We are all African. Biologically,
race does not exist. It is a social and cultural construct.
The U.S. is a country with a long history of social genocide (Native Americans,
African slavery, etc.) and this was all due to the seeming differences
we attributed to race. Yes, it is very convenient to categorize people
according to race. It is also extremely inaccurate, however.
Right now, with our election, I watch CNN and they talk about the Latino
vote, the Asian vote, the Black vote, etc. Obama is a “Black”
candidate when in reality he is multiethnic (as are probably Clinton,
McCain, etc. if you go back far enough in their genetic lineage.) Am I
part of the Asian vote or the White vote? The whole ignorance of multiracial/multiethnic
people is ludicrous.
In your Hyphen Magazine interview, you mentioned being Hapa
as being “soup du jour.” How can we keep this from happening?
Kip: You can’t really. And I’m not really sure you should
even try. At some point, we are just animals, and all fashion is , when
you get down to it, is silly trends. One decade we like straight hair,
another curly; women should be voluptuous or waifs, men should be hairy
or hairless… And then we spend $300 on jeans that have a different
cut so we can be in fashion again.
I’m as guilty of this as the next. I think it’s a good idea
to be aware of it though and not take yourself too seriously. That’s
something I see in a lot of younger artists and activists, myself included.
Do you think there is a cool trend in being ethnic these days?
Yes, certainly in Japan and the U.S. There is a public thirst for mutli-ethnic
models. In Japan, the Hapas I have seen, however, are almost always Asian/Caucasian
mixes. I think it’s a bit of the exotification of the difference…
Being different enough and yet not too threatening.
Can you explain the effects of colonialism in Asia in regards to Hapa-ism?
How has/does colonialism factor in Asia’s Hapa experience?
I think colonialism is alive and well, not because the U.S., U.K., Netherlands,
Spain, etc. are traveling by ship but because Universal, Microsoft, Rupert
Murdoch, MTV, etc. are all in the U.S. We may not be able to even win
an ill-conceived and illegal war in Iraq but can still put Britney Spears
in most every household in the world.
Do you think the growing awareness of Hapas in the U.S. and in Japan
as well will help abolish xenophobia in these countries or contribute
to it?
I think it’s a long way from anything. There is barely a growing
awareness here. Xenophobia isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. I
actually think it has more to do with education and media than anything.
As long as we are being fed corporate propaganda about what is or isn’t
newsworthy we are always going to slip into the easy/lazy route of thought
(witness the whole internet campaign against Obama because his middle
name is Hussein!!)
If enough attention is given about Hapas in Japan to make a splash,
how it would be received. Any thoughts?
I think it would be received with positive stereotypes (oh look, they’re
so kawaii, etc.) which is why in my project I include all sorts
of Hapas. The book is full of all sorts, fat, tall, ugly, short, beautiful,
weird, etc.
So how would you go about doing a Hapa project in Asia? What awareness
issues or stereotypes — if any — would you address?
I’d leave it all open to them. All my subjects are volunteers, so
I’d see what they’d want to come up with.
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