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What do Chen’s News Director and a U.S. Military Surgeon Have in Common?

“One of the defining features between an individual of Asian descent and someone of Western descent is the presence of an upper eyelid crease. Approximately 50% of Asians do not have an upper eyelid crease. The double eyelid operation, or creation of a supratarsal crease, is the most common cosmetic procedure requested in Asia and the third most common procedure requested by Asian Americans.”  Marilyn Q. Nguyen, Patrick W. Hsu, and Tue A. Dinh. “Asian Blepharoplasty.” Seminars in Plastic Surgery (August 2009). Cosmetic Surgery in the Ethnic Population: Special Considerations and Procedures.

As you may have already heard, talk and reality TV show host Julie Chen recently admitted to having surgery to create a supratarsal crease and remove the Asianness from her eyes, namely, her epicanthic fold.

Many news sites and bloggers have already picked up on the story, expanding on the racist surgery that so many Asian Americans elect. Few people, however, know the surgery’s relationship to U.S. imperialism and colonialism in Asia. Specifically, I want to alert you to the story of Dr. J.R. Millard, a U.S. military doctor who was stationed in Korea at the end of the Korean War.

Mihija Sohn, Miss Korea 1960, and Sung-hye Lee, Miss Korea 2012. (AP)

The above quoted article describes “Millard[‘s] comments that to get a true “round” or Western eye, the epicanthus must be eliminated.” This was his benevolent gesture to Koreans, particularly those among the war brides whose assimilation would be smoother were they to transform their bodies and faces for their new White families and communities (Note: Over 172,000 war brides came from Asia between WWII and the Vietnam War, with the help of the U.S. War Brides Act*). Specifically, Millard wrote the “Asian eyelid produces a passive expression which seems to epitomize the stoical and unemotional manner of the Oriental.”

Sound familiar? Maybe you heard Chen recount how her news director in Dayton, Ohio told her “that because of [her] Asian eyes…[she] look[s] disinterested and bored.'”

The creation of the Asian “other”, underscoring the phenotypical differences, the assigning of character traits to those differences between Whites and Asians, the value placed on–and the normalization of–racial brands of beauty, i.e. Millard’s “Western” eye, are all products of racism and cultural hegemony. The same racism that allow G.I.’s in Asia to dehumanize sex workers on and around U.S. military bases, that allowed for hundreds of thousands of soldiers in Vietnam to count any dead Vietnamese as an enemy casualty through the “Mere Gook Rule”, and for the U.S. to kill up to four million people through aerial bombs during the Korean War, and for the U.S. to exterminate one-sixth of the population of Luzon in one of the shortest, most forgotten and most invisible wars in U.S. history in the Philippines.**

An actual online ad

The invisibility of Asia and Asian Americans from American history and the literal scars that non-White bodies bear. If that isn’t a direct experience of oppression, or any of the other sh*t that is breaking our backs as Asian, black, indigenous, Latina, or otherwise “otherized” bodies, I’m not quite sure what is for Ms. Chen or Chen’s co-anchor Sheryl Underwood.

*Sheridan Prasso. The Asian Mystique
**Elaine Kim. Preface to Charlie Chan is Dead 2

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By Alison Roh Park

Alison Roh Park is a big personality from Queens, NYC. Pushcart nominated poet, communications head, and writer, Alison enjoys raging about, cracking on, and inspiring thought and action on unfortunate things like racism, capitalist greed, misogyny, cultural hegemony and stuff like that.

One reply on “What do Chen’s News Director and a U.S. Military Surgeon Have in Common?”

I remember Julie Chen anchoring the Early Show back in the early 2000s; although she looked okay, I was saddened to learn that she had cosmetic surgery to change her appearance. After I learned about that I became disappointed in her and stopped watching the show (I also didn’t think much of her when she took on the Big Brother reality show).

Asian eyelid surgery is very dangerous and degrading. The potential risks should stop people from going through with it. Whomever elects for this type of surgery has serious issues with self-hatred. Swollen eyes, interference with full eyelid closure, scarring, droopy eye are just some of the risks, you can read the rest of them here: http://www.drmeronk.com/asian/asian-eyelid-risks.html

Looking back on it all, Julie Chen was wanting to please the white majority for a long time. That’s how she rose from a local news reporter to a network anchor. She referred to the white dominated system as “the man” but she’s no longer able to speak as a person of color. She sold out.

Julia Chen had an affair with a married man (who just so happens to be the top guy at CBS Corp.) and now has a kid with him. She sold out her dignity and actually helps cement the image of the Asian gold digger in the minds of the American public (which sadly will include black Americans, Asian Americans, Native Americans and Hispanic Americans in addition to European Americans).

You can read about the Les Moonves/Julie Chen affair right here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Moonves

Julie Chen epitomizes the ready-to-please Asian woman and is shining example of the model minority stereotype.

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