yellow peril - définition. Qu'est-ce que yellow peril
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est yellow peril - définition


Yellow Peril         
  • In Revolutionary Mexico (1910–20) a wagonload of Asian corpses is en route to a common grave after fear of the Yellow Peril fear provoked a three-day massacre (11–15 May 1911) of 308 Asian people (303 Chinese, 5 Japanese) in the city of Torreón, Coahuila, in northern Mexico.
  • Yellow Peril xenophobia arose from the armed revolt of the Society of the Righteous and Harmonious Fists (the Boxers) to expel all Westerners from China, during the [[Boxer Rebellion]] (August 1899 – September 1901)
  • The Yellow Peril: Chinese men worked for wages lower than those a white man would accept.
  • Le Petit Journal]], 16 January 1898; English: "China – the cake of kings and ... of emperors"</ref>
  • ''Dr. Fu Manchu'' (1958) is an example of Yellow Peril ideology for children. (art by [[Carl Burgos]])
  • eugenic racialism]] proposed in ''[[The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy]]'' (1920), by [[Lothrop Stoddard]], presents either China or Japan as uniting the Oriental races to invade, conquer, and subjugate the white civilizations of the Western world.
  • The Yellow Peril Future: In ''Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe'' (1940), Ming the Merciless (Charles Middleton) and a concubine (Carmen D'Antonio).
  • Henry II of Silesia]], in Legnica.
  • French Indochina: In the oriental French Empire, the country and people of Vietnam were renamed ''French Indochina''. (1913)
  • Kaiser Wilhelm II used Yellow Peril ideology as geopolitical justification for Imperial German and European imperialism in China.
  • Unlike the Kaiser of Germany, King Edward VII of the United Kingdom did not see the Japanese as the Yellow Peril in the Russo–Japanese War. (1904–05)
  • To contain the Yellow Peril, the Immigration Act of 1917 established the Asiatic Barred Zone from which the U.S. admitted no immigrants.
  • The [[White Australia policy]] arose from the growth of anti-Asian (particularly Chinese) sentiments that peaked in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Pictured: The [[Melbourne Punch]] (c. May 1888)
  • The prostitute Suzie Wong (Nancy Kwan) working a sailor to earn her keep. (''The World of Suzie Wong'', 1960)
  • The Yellow Peril was used to justify the [[White Australia Policy]], which excluded dark-skinned [[Melanesians]] from immigration to Australia.
  • French postcard captioned "Make way for the yellows" shows Japanese imperialism running over four great nations of Europe—Russia, Britain, France, and Germany
  • The Randlord's (mine owners') exploitive employment of Chinese labor contributed to the Liberal Party victory in the 1906 elections. (Punch magazine, 1903)
  • Edith Hardy (Fannie Ward) and Hishuru Tori (Sessue Hayakawa) in ''The Cheat'' (1915)
  • ''The Green Mask'' #6 page 43, August 1941, [[Fox Feature Syndicate]], art by Munson Paddock
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  • Wilhelm II]] used the allegorical lithograph ''Peoples of Europe, Guard Your Most Sacred Possessions'' (1895), by [[Hermann Knackfuss]], to promote Yellow Peril ideology as geopolitical justification for European colonialism in China.
  • The religious racialism of ''The Yellow Peril'' (1911, 3rd ed.), by [[G. G. Rupert]], proposed that Russia would unite the Oriental races to invade, conquer, and subjugate Christian civilization in the Western world.
RACIST COLOR-METAPHOR THAT REPRESENTS EAST ASIAN PEOPLES AS AN 'EXISTENTIAL DANGER' TO THE WEST EUROPE AND AMERICA
Yellow terror; Yellow Terror; Yellow peril; Yellow menace; Yellow (slur); Yellow (racial slur); Yellow (epithet); Yellow (racial epithet); Yellow (racial term); Yellow (ethnic term); Yellow (ethnic slur)
The Yellow Peril (also the Yellow Terror and the Yellow Specter) is a racial colour-metaphor that depicts the peoples of East and Southeast Asia as an existential danger to the Western world. As a psycho-cultural menace from the Eastern world, fear of the Yellow Peril is racial, not national, a fear derived not from concern with a specific source of danger or from any one people or country, but from a vaguely ominous, existential fear of the faceless, nameless hordes of yellow people.
Yellow Peril (disambiguation)         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Yellow Peril is a racist color-metaphor that represents East Asian peoples as an existential danger to the Western world.
Le Péril jaune         
1983 STUDIO ALBUM BY INDOCHINE
Le Peril Jaune; Le Péril Jaune; Le Peril jaune
Le Péril Jaune (Yellow Peril) is the second studio album by French new wave post-punk band, Indochine. It was released in 1983 in France, Germany, Sweden, Netherlands and Spain.
Exemples du corpus de texte pour yellow peril
1. Curiously, however, he seems more concerned about the Lib Dems, devoting a page of his leaflet to the yellow peril.
2. But overkill is setting in with regard to the Chinese being the source of all the world‘s problems, with people less receptive to the "yellow peril" spiel.
3. One set of images kept alive the fantasy that, if only given the chance, the Chinese would embrace our ways and buy our goods; the other kept alive yellow peril visions of a China threat.
4. Here, in a spirit of fun and for the benefit of the electorate, the Mail looks for him in some unlikely hiding places Scroll down for more ... Yellow peril: He‘s no John Prescott, but will Homer ever understand the Working Families Tax Credit?
5. Russians feared the Yellow Peril with wild tales of the 2 million illegal immigrants ready to seize Russia‘s Far East. (Either the wily Chinese have learned invisibility, or they number, at most, one–tenth of that figure.) Yet, despite the barriers, a fundamental recasting of the relationship was vitally important to both countries.