Only if the reason for that dismissal is a racist one, but then that doesn't have much to do with the costume itself.The dismissal of how a certain culture feels about others using their culture could be.
Only if the reason for that dismissal is a racist one, but then that doesn't have much to do with the costume itself.The dismissal of how a certain culture feels about others using their culture could be.
Cultures are simply ideas and information, and ideas and information and meant to be shared.
I agree. I was responding to the post I quoted initially, not the thread itself.Only if the reason for that dismissal is a racist one, but then that doesn't have much to do with the costume itself.
You are aware that unlike a black basketball player's black skin, the white on a geisha's face is just makeup, and not their skin colour right?Just play it safe. If she want's to wear just a kimono and shoes (maybe hair as well), it's fine.
Most anything past that is too much.
No white make-up.
No eye augmentation.
No accent.
Think of it like if you want to go as a specific basketball player that happens to be black.
You wear the full uniform with basketball shoes and carry a basketball with you.
No black face.
No trying to sound "black".
to play it safe, stay clear from ''ethnic'' costumes that you have no links to.
Why be like this?What a sad world you live in.
What a sad world you live in.
Just play it safe. If she want's to wear just a kimono and shoes (maybe hair as well), it's fine.
Most anything past that is too much.
No white make-up.
No eye augmentation.
No accent.
Think of it like if you want to go as a specific basketball player that happens to be black.
You wear the full uniform with basketball shoes and carry a basketball with you.
No black face.
No trying to sound "black".
As I asked earlier in this thread, where do you draw the line? Is Marvel's Thor acceptable, or a disgusting display of cultural appropriation? Is it ok to dress up as Hercules or a Roman soldier for Halloween?to play it safe, stay clear from ''ethnic'' costumes that you have no links to.
If you think about it, witches and mummies are really racist portrayals of wiccans and Egyptians.As I asked earlier in this thread, where do you draw the line? Is Marvel's Thor acceptable, or a disgusting display of cultural appropriation? Is it ok to dress up as Hercules or a Roman soldier for Halloween?
These parallels...they are bad. You should rethink them.
Just tell everyone you're a cosplayer and you're wearing blackface to show how much you respect him.Is it black face if disguise myself as an exact 100% believable Raekwon? Or is it only blackface if the makeup is cheap?
Go patent culture, and we'll talk, then.Current state of patent laws says otherwise.
Didn't John Carmack had to change part of the lighting in Doom 3 BFG Edition because there was a patent for a formula he used in the code? Patenting mathematical formulas is probably the most insane shit ever.
The costume in and of itself is not racist. Where it becomes problematic is when people start throwing down the exaggerated accents and mannerisms with it. I've been to plenty of costume parties where people throw out terrible ethnic accents and it's always cringeworthy (not just specific to Asians). In my experience, when people dress up like this, most of them throw in the accents with it. I've heard several "Me love you long time" from people (both men and women) in geisha costumes and there are multiple problems with it.
If it's respectful than it isn't racist. But often, those costumes aren't respective in the least.
This is racist:
I don't think many people would consider this racist:
It's a problem when you're taking elements from another culture that is sacred or personal to that culture and you end up treating it like a cheap accessory with no meaning, especially if you yourself do not understand it.
Why is the frist one racist? Are you trying to take away my sexy geishas?
smh at all the "racism"
I dressed my son up as a viking this year. Apparently im appropriating someones culture.
There are no words
I don't see it as racist (though that can depend on the context of each situation), but just because they wear it doesn't mean it looks good on them. Same goes for kimono or yukata. There's almost always something off when a white person wears it.Since I'm not qualified to speak for the Japanese, I'll just say a white person dressing up in a Chinese qipao would be considered classy and not cultural appropriation. But feel free to teach me that this is actually Orientialism.
I don't see it as racist (though that can depend on the context of each situation), but just because they wear it doesn't mean it looks good on them. Same goes for kimono or yukata. There's almost always something off when a white person wears it.
im rolling
this cant be real life
You objectifying sexist piece of trashmy sexy geishas
Oh hell, your example is miles better, I lost my shit so bad.Guys, is it racist for Japanese people to dress up as Juggalos?
Whoa whoa, hold on.
People thought that the makeup was 'whiteface' or something?
Oh my fucking god. If you're gonna tumblr-rage at least know what the hell you're angry about.
Next up someone will think that kabuki is 'white face' with "Mike Tyson tattoo's" or something.
Seriously, this whole thread is an embarrassment.
Guys, is it racist for Japanese people to dress up as Juggalos?
I sure hope you didn't let him wear a helmet with horns. Now that would be offensive.I dressed my son up as a viking this year. Apparently im appropriating someones culture.
totally failed when linking my examples of why the person in the OP was doing it right (re: white makeup), so I'm just going to post it here:
Hot damn, they look amazing.
I sure hope you didn't let him wear a helmet with horns. Now that would be offensive.
That make-up is really thick. Wow.
And no dragons.
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Junior maiko
faces painted white leaving bare skin around hairline
cheek/eye areas a noticeable cherry blossom pink
eyes outlined in deep crimson and black
eyebrows defined with red/pink under the black
noticeable element - small proportion of her lower lip is painted in crimson.
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Senior maiko
faces painted white leaving bare skin around hairline
cheek/eye areas a subtle cherry blossom pink
eyes outlined in deep crimson and black
eyebrows defined with red/pink under the black
lips partually painted in crimson.
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Junior Geisha/Performance Geisha
faces painted white with the most subtle hint of pink for contouring
subtle outlining of crimson and black around eyes
eyebrows faintly defined with red/pink under the black
lips painted almost in full with crimson.
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Senior Geisha
subdued make-up of choice - generally of a natural colour or base.
totally failed when linking my examples of why the person in the OP was doing it right (re: white makeup), so I'm just going to post it .
I've heard several "Me love you long time" from people.
But if you read my later post understand this is not how it looked. At all.
It's cutural appropiation, which in and of itself is potentially racist (and is insensitive, at best).
Would it be racist if some one wore kabuki make-up for halloween? I say nay....unless she was doing a racist accent.
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Link? I may have missed it.
Grimløck;136714792 said:okay. take halloween and football games out of the equation. you're still missing the historical implications of a white man wearing an indian headdress. a black lady dressing up as a geisha might seem odd, and perhaps racist, but seeing a white man with a headdress leaves little doubt, even if it isn't intentional because there are historical implications attached to it.
Is this an across the board thing? Because when I was in the Order of the Arrow (a Boy Scout honor society, with a heavy nod to Native American traditions), I was on the Indian Dance Team. We dressed up in traditional Native American garb and danced traditional Native American dances (though not religious dances - those were forbidden). Was this racist? All, save a couple of us, were white.
comically so. little white kids dressed in indian headdresses and dancing with little to no understanding of its cultural significance no matter how much of it was taught. was it a gesture of reparation for systemically destroying native american culture? i'm obviously ignorant about what the "order of the arrow" is and what their aim is when dancing in native american dress, but for a lay observer like me, yeah, it's racist.Is this an across the board thing? Because when I was in the Order of the Arrow (a Boy Scout honor society, with a heavy nod to Native American traditions), I was on the Indian Dance Team. We dressed up in traditional Native American garb and danced traditional Native American dances (though not religious dances - those were forbidden). Was this racist? All, save a couple of us, were white.
Just an exploration of this entire concept... The Japanese dudes that dress in 50s, American style getups - leather jackets, greased up hair, etc... - is that also offensive? Am I supposed to be, as a white American male, offended by this? I'm just curious as to where the line is on "cultural appropriation" and why it's supposed to be offensive.
Just an exploration of this entire concept... The Japanese dudes that dress in 50s, American style getups - leather jackets, greased up hair, etc... - is that also offensive? Am I supposed to be, as a white American male, offended by this? I'm just curious as to where the line is on "cultural appropriation" and why it's supposed to be offensive.