Hi! You must login or signup first!

Screen_shot_2018-05-24_at_3.07.52_pm

Submission   41,323


About

Asian Hair Streak refers to a trend in western cinema and television to show asian characters, particularly in action roles, with a dyed section of color in their hair. The trope was first noticed on Tumblr in the fall of 2014 and discussion surrounding the trope was reignited in 2018 after a Twitter user called out the trope after seeing the character Yukio in Deadpool 2.

Origin

The Asian Hair Streak was first noticed on Tumblr by user extraextraex[1] on October 5th, 2014, pointing to characters such as Mako from Pacific Rim, Akima Kunimoto from Titan A.E., and GoGo Tomago from Big Hero 6 (shown below). The user made the point that while the trope wasn't necessarily negative, it was overused. The post gained over 82,000 notes.

pretty tired of seeing this hair trope on Asian characters EDIT: here's an insightful look into this trope from divallon to reiterate, this is not necessarily a bad trope or stereotype it is overused in Western media and East-Asian women deserve more variety and better representation than this

Spread

Tumblr user shoorm (since deleted) posted about the trope afterwards,[2] saying:

Yeah, it looks cute, but after seeing this over and over again, it becomes a boring, racist trope. This originated from a variety of possibilities: the creators trying to “Americanize” the East Asian character, make them more “exotic”, or to show how unique this character is. She’s not a giggling schoolgirl or a delicate lotus flower, she’s different! See, she has a streak of purple hair (god forbid she dyes it any other color), look how radical that is, look at our modern Dragon Lady!

The user also posted a picture with a dozen different characters who perpetuate the trope (shown below).

KnivěsChaU Mako Mori acificRim 8 Nikki Wong 6teen4 Akima Kunimoto itan AE Big Hero 6 Blink X-Men:Days of Future PastX-Men The Last Stand Miko Nakada ranstorners Prim uniper Lee The of Juniper Lee ükio Somni-451 Cloud Atlas The, olverine

In November of 2014, a page for the trope was added to TV Tropes, who also noted that Rufio from the 1991 film Hook also was an example of the trope.[3] Discussion about the trend resurfaced in 2017, when Twitter user @heartmush called it out in a tweet that gained over 5,700 retweets and 12,000 likes (shown below). This was covered by Buzzfeed.[4]

"洋洋 @heartmush Follow the fact that asian girls in media can't be rebellious/different without a streak of (purple) color in their hair pisses me off to no end.

Other media outlets to cover the trope include Huffington Post,[7] Teen Vogue,[8] and Bustle.[9]

2018 Resurgence

The issue was discussed again on social media when on May 21st, 2018, when Twitter user @nerdyasians[5] tweeted about the trope with the addition of the character Yukio in Deadpool 2. The tweet gained over 25,000 retweets and 66,000 likes (shown below).


nerdy @nerdyasians Follow it's time for western media to drop the idea that asian girls need neon streaks of color in their hair to stand out. 25 ig e 9:18 PM -21 May 2018

The ensuing discussion led to the creation of Twitter Moments.[6] Some Asian commenters stated that the trope is done to show the characters as rebellious, as Asian women with black hair in western media are generally portrayed as more docile (shown below, left). Other Twitter users pointed to other characters, such as Sun Bak from Sense8, who bucks the trope (shown below, right).

boo boo the fool @ayyyooorianne Followv My hair is blue but the western media perpetuates Asian girls with dyed hair as rebels, girls who don't conform to the rest is Asian stereotypes. While obviously this doesn't apply to EVERY movie including Asian women, often the women with undyed hair represent the docile Asians nerdy @nerdyasians it's time for western media to drop the idea that asian girls need neon streaks of color in their hair to stand out. Show this thread
check out my art @Readmajin @readmajin Followv Replying to @nerdyasians@JohannaTheMad um, has eVERYONE CONVENIENTLY FORGOTTEN SUN BAK OF SENSE8??? GIF

Search Interest

Unavailable

External References



Share Pin

Recent Images 9 total


Recent Videos 0 total

There are no recent videos.




Load 120 Comments
Asian Hair Streak

Asian Hair Streak

Updated Oct 10, 2019 at 02:07AM EDT by Y F.

Added May 24, 2018 at 03:19PM EDT by Adam.

PROTIP: Press 'i' to view the image gallery, 'v' to view the video gallery, or 'r' to view a random entry.

This submission is currently being researched & evaluated!

You can help confirm this entry by contributing facts, media, and other evidence of notability and mutation.

About

Asian Hair Streak refers to a trend in western cinema and television to show asian characters, particularly in action roles, with a dyed section of color in their hair. The trope was first noticed on Tumblr in the fall of 2014 and discussion surrounding the trope was reignited in 2018 after a Twitter user called out the trope after seeing the character Yukio in Deadpool 2.

Origin

The Asian Hair Streak was first noticed on Tumblr by user extraextraex[1] on October 5th, 2014, pointing to characters such as Mako from Pacific Rim, Akima Kunimoto from Titan A.E., and GoGo Tomago from Big Hero 6 (shown below). The user made the point that while the trope wasn't necessarily negative, it was overused. The post gained over 82,000 notes.


pretty tired of seeing this hair trope on Asian characters EDIT: here's an insightful look into this trope from divallon to reiterate, this is not necessarily a bad trope or stereotype it is overused in Western media and East-Asian women deserve more variety and better representation than this

Spread

Tumblr user shoorm (since deleted) posted about the trope afterwards,[2] saying:

Yeah, it looks cute, but after seeing this over and over again, it becomes a boring, racist trope. This originated from a variety of possibilities: the creators trying to “Americanize” the East Asian character, make them more “exotic”, or to show how unique this character is. She’s not a giggling schoolgirl or a delicate lotus flower, she’s different! See, she has a streak of purple hair (god forbid she dyes it any other color), look how radical that is, look at our modern Dragon Lady!

The user also posted a picture with a dozen different characters who perpetuate the trope (shown below).


KnivěsChaU Mako Mori acificRim 8 Nikki Wong 6teen4 Akima Kunimoto itan AE Big Hero 6 Blink X-Men:Days of Future PastX-Men The Last Stand Miko Nakada ranstorners Prim uniper Lee The of Juniper Lee ükio Somni-451 Cloud Atlas The, olverine

In November of 2014, a page for the trope was added to TV Tropes, who also noted that Rufio from the 1991 film Hook also was an example of the trope.[3] Discussion about the trend resurfaced in 2017, when Twitter user @heartmush called it out in a tweet that gained over 5,700 retweets and 12,000 likes (shown below). This was covered by Buzzfeed.[4]


"洋洋 @heartmush Follow the fact that asian girls in media can't be rebellious/different without a streak of (purple) color in their hair pisses me off to no end.

Other media outlets to cover the trope include Huffington Post,[7] Teen Vogue,[8] and Bustle.[9]

2018 Resurgence

The issue was discussed again on social media when on May 21st, 2018, when Twitter user @nerdyasians[5] tweeted about the trope with the addition of the character Yukio in Deadpool 2. The tweet gained over 25,000 retweets and 66,000 likes (shown below).


nerdy @nerdyasians Follow it's time for western media to drop the idea that asian girls need neon streaks of color in their hair to stand out. 25 ig e 9:18 PM -21 May 2018

The ensuing discussion led to the creation of Twitter Moments.[6] Some Asian commenters stated that the trope is done to show the characters as rebellious, as Asian women with black hair in western media are generally portrayed as more docile (shown below, left). Other Twitter users pointed to other characters, such as Sun Bak from Sense8, who bucks the trope (shown below, right).


boo boo the fool @ayyyooorianne Followv My hair is blue but the western media perpetuates Asian girls with dyed hair as rebels, girls who don't conform to the rest is Asian stereotypes. While obviously this doesn't apply to EVERY movie including Asian women, often the women with undyed hair represent the docile Asians nerdy @nerdyasians it's time for western media to drop the idea that asian girls need neon streaks of color in their hair to stand out. Show this thread check out my art @Readmajin @readmajin Followv Replying to @nerdyasians@JohannaTheMad um, has eVERYONE CONVENIENTLY FORGOTTEN SUN BAK OF SENSE8??? GIF

Search Interest

Unavailable

External References

Recent Videos

There are no videos currently available.

Recent Images 9 total


+ Add a Comment

Comments (120)


Display Comments

Add a Comment