色戒成人直播

Skip to main content

How Asian American became a racial grouping

How Asian American became a racial grouping

Top image: Children performing a traditional Korean dance to celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. (Photo: Viorel Florescu/AP)

And why many with Asian roots don鈥檛 identify with the term these days


For the first time, in 1990, May was officially designated as a month honoring Asian American and Pacific Islander heritage. Though the current U.S. administration , the month continues to be celebrated by a wide array of people from diverse cultural backgrounds.

People from the Pacific Islands have their own distinct , delineated in part by a specific geography. Yet when we refer to the even broader category of , a concept with a deep yet often unknown history, who exactly are we referring to?

There are nearly who live in the United States, but the term Asian American remains shrouded by cultural misunderstanding and contested as a term among Asians themselves.

Jennifer Ho

Jennifer Ho is a professor of Asian American studies in the 色戒成人直播 Department of Ethnic Studies and director of the Center for Humanities and the Arts.

As a professor of Asian American studies, I believe it is important to understand how the label came into being.

A long history of Asian people in America

The arrival of people from Asia to the U.S. long predates the country鈥檚 founding in 1776.

After , Filipino sailors to be the first Asian settlement in St. Malo, Louisiana.

But it wasn鈥檛 until the 1849 that Asian immigration to the U.S.from Chinabegan on a mass scale. That was bolstered in the 1860s by Chinese laborers recruited to build the western portion of the .

Starting toward the end of the 19th century, Japanese immigration steadily picked up, so that by 1910 the a similar number for both communities 鈥 just over 70,000. Likewise, a small number of South Asian immigrants began arriving in the early 1900s.

An exclusionary backlash

Yet after coming to the U.S. in search of economic and political opportunities, Asian laborers in America were met by a surge of . That reaction was codified in civil society groups and government laws, such as the in 1882.

By 1924, federal law had expanded into a virtual ban on all Asian immigration, and through the first half of the 20th century, a multitude of anti-Asian laws targeted areas including , and , among others.

From the start, people from Asian countries in the U.S. were generally identified broadly with identifiers such as 鈥,鈥 a common term at the time mostly for those from China, Japan and Korea.

As more Asians came to the U.S, these new immigrants, whose physical appearance, language and cultural norms were distinctly different from their Euro-American neighbors.

鈥楢sian American鈥 and the birth of a movement

Chinese railroad workers in Ogden, Utah, in 1919

Chinese railroad workers (left to right) Wong Fook, Lee Chao and Ging Cui with a parade float in Ogden, Utah, during a 1919 parade celebrating the 50th anniversary of the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad. (Photo: San Francisco Public Library)

The desire to claim America was one of the drivers for activists in the 1960s to create the concept of that we know today.

The movement began in the charged political context of protests and the for Black equality. Students of Asian heritage at San Francisco State University and the University of California, Berkeley were , specifically those that centered on the histories of Asians in the U.S.

Rejecting the term 鈥渙riental鈥 as too limiting and exotic, since oriental literally means 鈥渇rom the East,鈥 the student activists wanted a term of empowerment that would include the Filipino, Chinese, Korean and Japanese students at the heart of this organizing. Graduate students came up with 鈥淎sian American鈥 as a way to bring activists under one , forming the Asian American Political Alliance in 1968.

A contested term

Today, the Asian American label has moved beyond its activist roots. The term might literally refer to anyone who traces their lineage from the whole of the Asian continent. This could include people from South Asian countries such as India, Pakistan or Sri Lanka to parts of West Asia like Syria, Lebanon or Iran.

Yet not all people use the words Asian American, since it is and lumps together people with as disparate of backgrounds as Hmong or Bangladeshi, for example.

A 2023 of self-identified Asian adults living in the U.S. revealed that only 16% of people polled said they identified as 鈥淎sian American,鈥 with a majority52%preferring ethnic Asian labels, either alone or in tandem with 鈥淎merican.鈥

Moreover, unlike the student activists who worked together through their shared Asian American identity, the majority of people of Asian descent living in the U.S. came after the was passed, which ended all prior anti-Asian immigration laws. This, combined with a subsequent wave of Asian immigration from parts of Asia not represented in the pastincluding Vietnam, Taiwan and Pakistanmeans that most Asian Americans alive today are either immigrants or one generation removed from immigrants.

As a largely immigrant and recently Americanized group, many Asians therefore may not relate to the struggles of an earlier . That may contribute to why .鈥 Korean immigrants, for instance, may not see their history connected with third-generation Japanese Americans, particularly when considering their homelands .

For some, to capture the complexity of Asian-heritage Americans.

Indeed, come from over 30 countries with different languages, diverse cultures, and histories that have often been in . Within such a broad grouping as 鈥淎sian American,鈥 a wide range of political, socioeconomic, religious and other differences emerge that greatly complicate this racial label.

Even though the term remains contested, many Asians still . Much like the activists who first created the label in the 1960s, many believe it signifies a sense of solidarity and community among people whodespite their many differenceshave been treated like outsiders to the American experience, regardless of how American their roots are.


Jennifer Ho is a professor of Asian American studies in the Department of Ethnic Studies at the .

This article is republished from  under a Creative Commons license. Read the .