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Please help improve the article or discuss these issues on the talk page. | Asian pride is a slogan used by some Asian people who are proud of their heritage. Traditional Chinese (Traditional Chinese: æ£é«å/ç¹é«å, Simplified Chinese: æ£ä½å/ç¹ä½å) refers to one of two standard sets of printed Chinese characters. ...
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Pinyin (拼音, Pīnyīn) literally means join (together) sounds (a less literal translation being phoneticize, spell or transcription) in Chinese and usually refers to Hànyǔ Pīnyīn (汉语拼音, literal meaning: Han language pinyin), which is a system of...
Wade-Giles, sometimes abbreviated Wade, is a Romanization (phonetic notation and transliteration) system for the Chinese language based on Mandarin. ...
Hindi ( , Devanagari: or , IAST: , IPA: ), an Indo-European language spoken all over India in varying degrees and extensively in northern and central India, is one of the two central official languages of India, the other being English. ...
() is an abugida script used to write, either along with other scripts, or exclusively, several Indian languages, including Sanskrit, Hindi, Marathi, Sindhi, Bihari, Bhili, Marwari, Konkani, Bhojpuri, languages from Nepal like Nepali, Tharu Nepal Bhasa and sometimes Kashmiri and Romani. ...
Japanese writing Kanji Kana Hiragana Katakana Hentaigana ManyÅgana Uses Furigana Okurigana RÅmaji ) are the Chinese characters that are used in the modern Japanese logographic writing system along with hiragana (平仮å), katakana (çä»®å), and the Arabic numerals. ...
Hiragana ) is a Japanese syllabary, one component of the Japanese writing system, along with katakana and kanji; the Latin alphabet is also used in some cases. ...
Japanese writing Kanji æ¼¢å Kana ä»®å Hiragana 平仮å Katakana çä»®å Uses Furigana æ¯ãä»®å Okurigana éãä»®å RÅmaji ãã¼ãå Category RÅmaji (ãã¼ãå Roman characters, sometimes misunderstood as romanji in English), is a Japanese term for the Latin alphabet. ...
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Hanja is the Korean name for Chinese characters. ...
McCune-Reischauer romanization is one of the two most widely used Korean language romanization systems, along with the Revised Romanization of Korean, which replaced (a modified) McCune-Reischauer as the official romanization system in South Korea in 2000. ...
The Revised Romanization of Korean is the official Korean language romanization system in South Korea. ...
The Vietnamese alphabet has the following 29 letters, in collating order: Vietnamese also uses the 10 digraphs and 1 trigraph below. ...
Look up slogan in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Asian people[1] is a demonym for people from Asia. ...
History
Asian pride had its formative stage in European colonialism.[1] At one time, Europeans owned 85% of the world's land through colonialism, resulting anti-Western feelings among Asian nations.[1] Today, some Asians still look upon European involvement in their affairs with suspicion.[1] However, the Asians still proudly remember when the Mongols created the largest empire in history, the Mongol Empire, which stretched from the far east all the way to present day Hungary and eastern Europe. This oft-talked of era still raises fear in eastern Europeans today who were conquered.
Culture The core idea of Asian pride is respect for things Asian and also involves "Asian" "pride" as is included in the slogan.[2] Asian pride seeks to cultivate the Hindu, Taoist, Confucist, Buddhist thought of Asian culture and repudiate the Jewish, Christian, and Islamic foreign thought.[1] Asian pride re-evaluates the devaluation of Asian culture by European culture, claiming that Asian values are better than European values.[1]It is highly racialized concept trying to separate "Asian" from the others, particularly White people and has explicit cultural and racial emphasis. For example, the prime example of Asian Pride is considered to be the Got Rice? song that identifies the "Asian" countries as a single entity. For other uses, see Asia (disambiguation). ...
Pride is the name of an emotion which refers to a strong sense of self-respect, a refusal to be humiliated as well as joy in the accomplishments of oneself or a person, group, nation or object that one identifies with. ...
For other uses, see Race (disambiguation). ...
âWhitesâ redirects here. ...
The phrase Got Rice? is a term that was coined by Asian American youth in the 1990s shortly after the original Got Milk? advertising campaign for the California Milk Board in 1993. ...
Asians find error in many ideas introduced into their societies by Europeans.[1] The European ideal of individualism is at odds with the traditional collective and family-oriented mentality of China.[1] Asians do not like European Christian missionaries trying to convert them to Christianity under the guise of trying to civilize Asians, because Asians have had centuries of advanced civilization without Christianity.[1] However, in Asia there are communities of devout, evangelist Christians who are committed to the introduction of their faith to others. In popular websites such as Myspace and Facebook, there are groups existing not under the names of "AZN Pride", but named, "白人看不懂". Which literally means, "White people don't understand [this]."
Usage Its current usage originated on the streets in the 1990s and has spread to the extent that most Asian Americans have heard of it, mostly the younger ones. It is now a huge internet phenomenon largely because of the Got Rice? song. [citation needed] It is known to be used by Asian American youth to describe their sense of connection to other Asians. It is often written in camelcase and/or spelled as variations of "AZN Pryde. In North America, it is usually used by those with ancestry in East Asia and Southeast Asia, and in Britain by those with ancestry in South Asia. "Worldwide" is sometimes added to the end of the slogan to express an identity which extends beyond national borders to all Asians and because it rhymes. An Asian American is a person of Asian ancestry or origin who was born in or is an immigrant to the United States. ...
The phrase Got Rice? is a term that was coined by Asian American youth in the 1990s shortly after the original Got Milk? advertising campaign for the California Milk Board in 1993. ...
An Asian American is a person of Asian ancestry or origin who was born in or is an immigrant to the United States. ...
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North America North America is a continent[1] in the Earths northern hemisphere and (chiefly) western hemisphere. ...
Kinship and descent is one of the major concepts of cultural anthropology. ...
East Asia Geographic East Asia. ...
Location of Southeast Asia Southeast Asia is a subregion of Asia. ...
Map of South Asia (see note on Kashmir). ...
Daily life Arar Han writes, "Ching chong. Pachinko."[3] The mentality may prove incompatible with non-Asians. Australia has been considered 'un-Asian' and an "Asian values promotion was largely an assertion of East Asian pride against the long wounding it had received directly or indirectly at the hands of the West," with the West denoting everywhere outside East Asia in this case.[4] Some counselors and social workers have interpreted the declaration of 'Asian Pride' to signify membership to gangs and a precursor to violence.[5] Look up Counselor in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
A social worker is a person employed in the administration of charity, social service, welfare, and poverty agencies, advocacy, or religious outreach programs. ...
See also Pan-Asianism is an ideology that Asian countries and peoples share similar values and similar histories and should be united politically or culturally. ...
The phrase Got Rice? is a term that was coined by Asian American youth in the 1990s shortly after the original Got Milk? advertising campaign for the California Milk Board in 1993. ...
Other cultures Black pride is a slogan used interchangeably to depict both the movement of and concept within politically active black communities, especially African Americans in the United States and secluding White communities. ...
White Aryan Resistance member wearing a white pride t-shirt White pride is a slogan used primarily in the United States (though its usage has spread internationally) to promote the glorification of the heritage of persons of White-European racial identity[1]âthough generally to the exclusion of homosexuals and...
External links - Between Two Worlds: Born in the U.S.A. to Asian Parents, a Generation of Immigrants' Kids Forges a New Identity, a Time magazine article from their January 16, 2006 issue
Time (whose trademark is capitalized TIME) is a weekly American newsmagazine, similar to Newsweek and U.S. News & World Report. ...
References - ^ a b c d e f g h Langguth, Gerd. German Foreign Affairs Review. "Dawn of the 'Pacific' Century?" 1996. June 30, 2007. [1]
- ^ !Azn Pride! What Azn Pride Really Is. November 10, 2006.[2]
- ^ Arar Han and John Hsu (editors) (2004-08-05). Asian American X: An Intersection of Twenty-First Century Asian American Voices. University of Michigan Press, 237. ISBN 978-0472068746.
- ^ Rawdon Dalrymple (March 2003http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Asian_pride&action=edit§ion=1). Continental Drift: Australia's Search for a Regional Identity. Ashgate Publishing, 119. ISBN 978-0754634461.
- ^ Pyong Gap Min (July 2002). The Second Generation: Ethnic Identity among Asian Americans (Critical Perspectives on Asian Pacific Americans Series). AltaMira Press, 129. ISBN 978-0759101760. “More than once have I heard counselors and social workers at seminars declare that 'when gang kids talk about "Asian Pride"... beware! What they're actually up to is more trouble, more violence!'”
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