ISBN:
9780824862060
Language:
English
Pages:
1 online resource
,
18 illus
DDC:
305.48/89560969
Keywords:
Beauty contests
;
Japanese American women Ethnic identity
;
Japanese American women Psychology
;
Japanese American women Social conditions
Abstract:
After World War II, Japanese Americans in Hawai‘i sought to carve a positive niche of public citizenship in the community. In 1953 members of the Honolulu Japanese Junior Chamber of Commerce and their wives created a beauty contest, the Cherry Blossom Festival (CBF) Queen Pageant, which quickly became an annual spectacle for the growing urban population of Honolulu. Crowning the Nice Girl analyzes the pageant through its decades of development to the present within multiple frameworks of gender, class, and race/ethnicity. Drawing on extensive archival research; interviews with CBF queens, contestants, and organizers; and participant observation in the Fiftieth Annual Festival as a volunteer, Christine Yano paints a complex portrait of not only a beauty pageant, but also a community.The study begins with the subject of beauty pageants in general and Asian American beauty pageants in particular, interrogating the issues they raise, embedding them within their histories, and examining them as part of a global culture that has taken its model from the Miss America contest.Yano follows the pageant throughout the decades into the 1990s, adding corresponding "herstories"—extensive narratives drawn from interviews with CBF queens. She concludes by framing issues of race, ethnicity, spectacle, and community within the intertwined themes of niceness and banality
Note:
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 19. Jan 2018)
,
In English
DOI:
10.21313/9780824862060
DOI:
10.21313/9780824862060
URL:
Volltext
(URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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