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Katy Perry’s fashion imperialism on the American Music Awards

I just came back from Asia, where I felt like a white guy. And I am not.

I’m an Asian American of Filipino descent, but when I was over there, it was clear I was the foreigner. Most of the people were in Western business dress, so on one level there was a “We Are The World” sameness. But a line was drawn when I saw people on TV or in real life appearing in native dress. That was their life and style, not mine.

So you can imagine what I was thinking as I saw Katy Perry show off her Japanese fetish on the American Music Awards the other night.

Frankly, I couldn’t believe what I was seeing.

This wasn’t just innocent clothes horseplay.

It was one of those acts of ignorance that when played up in primetime stuns people into thinking it’s all right.

It’s not all right.

When I was in Asia last week, no matter how much I admired any bit of native garb I saw, I knew my place. It wasn’t my garb. When I went into a store in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, I didn’t go overboard and buy an Islamic man’s songkok to wear as a souvenir back in the U.S.

It looked kind of cool. But I came to my senses quickly after trying it on.

It just didn’t fit. And it was one size fits all.

Ethnic clothing fetishes really aren’t very becoming in this day and age–unless it’s your culture and you’re showing some pride during heritage month. (Does anyone really ever do that?)

How would I look in a Native American headdress of feathers? Or a Sikh’s turban? Ridiculous–even on Halloween.

Unless you have a clear purpose or reason, there’s no reason for ethnic drag. Fashionista solidarity? Get real.

I’m not being PC. But as a professional ethnicist, I just have a sense of these things.

When it comes to racial appropriation, there’s a thin line between an honest cultural appreciation and racism.

When do you know you’ve crossed it? Something just feels wrong. Katy Perry wasn’t wearing a songkok to kick off Sunday’s American Music Awards on ABC. If she were, her people would have just said, “Uh, Katy, lose the hat.”

Instead, Perry wore a Japanese kimono (with a touch of Chinese qipao) and was in full cultural regalia, with back-up dancers holding parasols and fans, drummers, and rice paper screens. The whole segment was Asianed-up.

For what reason exactly, it’s unclear. Perry had just been to Japan and reportedly was so enthralled with the culture, she decided to appropriate it for her act.

There are better ways to show your appreciation. Like leaving it alone as you found it, without trying to ape or mimic it.

Why risk being offensive with a bit of cultural costume imperialism?

Katy Perry in schoolgirl drag singing of teenage love, or dressed as a star-spangled gal to sing “Firework” is one thing.

But the racial element adds another dimension to this dress up game.

Was it really anything but another form of blackface? Blackface has no place in modern showbiz. Perry doing her Asian thing in costumed yellowface isn’t much different and is just as offensive.

Unfortunately, these kinds of cultural games have been played for years in Hollywood, as if race were a function of hair and makeup. Mickey Rooney in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” is perhaps the most famous example. Done for comic effect in the Truman Capote tale, it’s all based on stereotypes (buck teeth, glasses, and more) and passed off as real. Katy Perry on the AMAs was just one cultural stereotype after another, with none of it in the end adding up to a full-blooded 100 percent person.

And if you think Perry’s use of Japanese culture is so benign, Jon Funabiki, the executive director at the Center for the Study of Japan and Japanese Culture, has a few choice words for you.

On his Facebook page, he was pretty plain. “Katy Perry,” Funabiki wrote,”awful, awful, awful Asian stereotypes.”

When I read that, I knew I was in the right key, and Perry was not.

You can give Perry a pass by saying there was nothing malicious about her going Japanese. But that’s exactly when some of the worst transgressions occur–when people honestly believe they’ve done nothing wrong and then become adamant about the right to their own ignorance. It was odd seeing the mostly white crowd leap up to praise Perry with approving applause after her imperial performance. She had successfully appropriated an entire culture and gave it her own Perry pop spin. A standing ovation for that? At least she didn’t use makeup to slant her eyes.

Although maybe she’s a friend of Julie Chen and thinks all the Asians are going round-eye western? Would that make geisha-ed out Perry the image of the perfect Asian?

Image by AALDEF

Emil Guillermo is an independent journalist/commentator. Updates at www.amok.com. Follow Emil on Twitter, and like his Facebook page.

The views expressed in his blog do not necessarily represent AALDEF’s views or policies.

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