Question

"Are Asian Americans Becoming "White"?" Min Zhou
Zhou discusses the way that, officially and unofficially, Asian Americans are more and more often being combined with Whites as having similar experiences. Unofficially they are considered the "model minority", with some achieving successes consistent with the American Dream, and officially the fact that the two groups are combined when it comes to equal opportunity programs. Zhou first criticizes this for the fact that Asian American is a designation that includes people from a multitude of different countries of origin, each having different experiences both in the past and during their time in the United States. The "model minority" label is seen as being problematic for reinforcing the stereotype that racism no longer exists: that any other racial or ethnic group should be able to achieve the same. It also ignores the fact that different Asian American groups have achieved different levels of assimilation and social class standing, and are not a heterogeneous group that can be described with a singular label.
Zhou describes that most Asian Americans are not seeing to become "White", but see that as the standard norm for American society, and their own identity is more nationalistic (American) than racial. However, the perspective that Asian Americans would be able to achieve "Whiteness" would also minimize and ignore the impact of anti-Asian discrimination and racism that is still present in American society.
The term "Asian American" was created in the
a. Early 1940s
b. Late 1950s
c. Late 1960s
d. Early 1970s

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