
Photo illustration by John Lamphere |
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Mail
Order Brides
The
Evolution And Politics Of Marriages Made In The Mail.
By Emily Monroy
During
the first large wave of Asian immigration in the twentieth century,
many Japanese and Korean women came to the United States as picture
brides. The picture bride system, according to author Yen Le Espiritu,
was a form of "arranged marriage facilitated by the exchange
of photographs." A Japanese or Korean immigrant man would
look at a photograph of a potential wife back home and, if he
"liked what he saw," he would send for her to join him
in the United States. Some Japanese and Korean women volunteered
to become picture brides, seeing migration to the States as an
adventure as well as a chance to escape the restricted life women
frequently led in their homelands. As one Korean woman put it,
"then I could get to America that land of freedom
with streets paved with gold!"
Nearly a century later, picture brides have been replaced by mail
order brides. But the two practices diverge in a substantial way.
Whereas Korean and Japanese picture brides generally married men
of the same national background, the mail order bride system involves
men seeking wives, and women seeking husbands, from ethnic groups
other than their own. The homelands of modern mail order brides
also differ from those of yesterday's picture brides. The majority
of the former come from the Philippines, Thailand, Latin America
and the former Soviet Union, with a smattering of women from North
and sub-Saharan Africa. Most of the men who "order"
these women live in developed regions, such as Australia, North
America, Western Europe, and Japan.
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__________________
White
men who seek mail order brides are often accused
of subscribing to stereotypes about the supposed "submissiveness"
of non-Western (particularly Asian) women.
__________________
Feminists
and minority activists have attacked the mail order bride system as
racist and sexist. That it is sexist seems beyond question; after
all, the only "mail order groom" site on the Internet turned
out to be a joke, featuring one man who wanted a wife between the
ages of seven and fifteen and another who couldn't use the family
car without his mother's permission. Some women's rights advocates
point out that mail order brides are vulnerable to domestic violence.
The case of Susana Remerata, a Filipina in Seattle who was murdered
by her American husband, is cited as an example.
The charge of racism is not far behind, especially as most of these
women come from the Third World. White men who seek mail order brides
are often accused of subscribing to stereotypes about the supposed
"submissiveness" of non-Western (particularly Asian) women.
In her essay "Recipe," Chinese-Canadian writer C. Allyson
Lee gives a humorous description of a fictional client's search for
a submissive Asian woman. She writes: "Attractive Straight White
Male, middle-aged business executive looking for that special little
China Doll, preferably short, petite and obedient. Object: to fulfill
typical fantasies of the stereotype of Oriental ladies anxious to
marry a Canadian in order to get out of Hong Kong or the Philippines
and willing to do anything to pamper and please her man."
Mail order bride agencies on the Internet frequently do have something
to say about the ethnic traits of the women they feature. For instance,
one venue declares that unlike modern-day American women, Filipinas
are completely devoted to their husbands and families. The same characteristics
are attributed to Latinas on another website. An agency based in Italy
states that Filipinas are still "good Catholic girls"
which Italian women apparently no longer are. Some organisations play
minority women against each other, touting the superiority of one
group. According to an American outfit, women from the Philippines
are more beautiful than their counterparts from China and Japan, so
much so, the site adds, that Filipinas are often hired to play Chinese
and Japanese roles in the movies.
While it's easy to condemn such pronouncements as sexist, many mail
order bride agencies don't shy away from commenting on the men from
these women's homelands. But they don't paint a very flattering picture
of them. One site featuring Filipinas purports that Asian men, in
contrast to their Western peers, don't hold doors for women (this
certainly wasn't true of the Asian students at my former university).
Another claims that Latin American husbands typically come home drunk
and beat their wives. The purpose of such bad-mouthing, of course,
is to convince potential clients that by choosing an American (or
Australian or Western European) husband, these women are getting a
far better deal than what they'd find in their country of birth and
will be grateful as a result.
__________________
...the
fact that at the moment Romania is a poor country
and Japan a rich one effectively stops the flow of brides
between the two nations in its tracks.
__________________
In
the end, however, the mail order bride racket can't be boiled down
entirely to race. A good portion of the women signed on with these
agencies are white, generally from the former Soviet Union, and some
of the men who "order" brides via such venues are not. Among
the frequent destinations of Filipinas, for example, is Japan. As
well, some American clients who seek wives from the Third World and
Eastern Europe are black or Hispanic. The movement of mail order brides
is less a flow of women from non-white to white countries than from
poor to rich ones. There probably aren't too many mail order brides
going from Japan to Romania, for instance. Though Romanian men may
very well hold the same stereotypes of the "passive Oriental
lady" that other white men do, the fact that at the moment Romania
is a poor country and Japan a rich one effectively stops the flow
of brides between the two nations in its tracks. The predominance
of economics over race can also be seen by looking at individual countries.
When the mail order bride phenomenon first caught the public's attention
in the 1980s, most of the women in question were Asian. Yet a glance
at any mail order bride website's headings for industrialized Asian
nations such as Singapore and Japan will show that the women featured
are primarily Filipinas working there as domestic servants. Japanese
and Singaporean women don't need to go abroad as mail order brides.
In addition, the fact that a mail order bride transaction is intraracial
rather than interracial doesn't mean that ethnic stereotyping isn't
involved. Some agencies supplying Filipina women to Japanese men,
for example, contrast the former's traditional devotion to home and
hearth to the modern Japanese woman's supposed rejection of marriage
and motherhood. Others depict Russian women as uncontaminated by the
militant feminism that has allegedly infected America's female population
(why Russian women would be considered June Cleavers is somewhat curious,
as at least during the Soviet regime most of them worked outside the
home). And just as mail order bride venues often portray Latino and
Asian men as boorish compared to their white American counterparts,
Eastern European men are described as slobbering drunks who don't
know the meaning of the word "ìprovider."
In the same way I'm hesitant to reduce the mail order bride business
solely to the issue of race, I'm also sceptical of labeling potential
or actual brides themselves as deluded victims of racism and/or patriarchy.
That's the viewpoint of many feminists and minority activists. But
Carlos Butalid, a Filipino community leader living in the Netherlands,
points out the dangers of treating such women as victims. He cites
an incident in which Philippine feminist associations berated Filipinas
for corresponding as pen pals with European men and asked them how
much they were being paid to marry Europeans. The women in question
took offense, feeling that "after struggling so hard to earn
the respect of their colleagues and their community, all of a sudden
they [were] portrayed by Philippine progressives as cheap playthings."
__________________
He
cites an incident in which Philippine feminist
associations berated Filipinas for corresponding as
pen pals with European men and asked them how
much they were being paid to marry Europeans.
__________________
The
feminist groups' behavior reflects in some sense the general attitude
of some progressive Asians toward Asian women becoming involved with
white men, mail order brides or not. As I've mentioned in previous
essays, well-known Filipina-American activist Karin Aguilar-San Juan
speaks of Asian female partners of white men as "splaying themselves"
at the latter's feet. She essentially portrays them as C. Allyson
Lee's fictional white male in "Recipe" does. Undoubtedly
some Asian women might find Aguilar-San Juan's description of them
insulting, even if it's meant in their best interests, in the same
way I would take offense at Spanish so-called feminist Ana Perez del
Campo's statement that by trying to keep their children, divorced
women are driving them into a life of poverty. With friends like that,
who needs enemies?
Some Asian women feel compelled to explain their choice to go the
mail order bride route, and their reasons for doing so aren't necessarily
that they want to act as geishas for white men. In some cases, they
actually perceive Western men to be more egalitarian than their own
male compatriots (whether this perception is correct or not is another
story, of course). One Filipina who runs her own marriage agency explains
that "in the Philippines, a man can beat his wife." In a
similar vein, a report on Brazilian women allegedly exploited by European
sexual tourism claimed that these women's European husbands treated
them better than their "macho" boyfriends at home.
I nonetheless don't take an entirely benign view of the mail order
bride business. For one, many women get involved in it because of
unfavorable economic and/or social conditions in their homelands.
Feminists and minority activists are also right to say that women
who go abroad as wives of men whom they may hardly know and who wield
such enormous economic and often psychological power over them are
easy targets for abuse. Finally, I do believe race, and racial stereotyping,
play a role in the mail order bride system. Yet the left's reduction
of the system to racism is not necessarily the whole story either.
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Emily
Monroy is a professional translator and is of Irish, Italian and
Norwegian descent. Born in Windsor, Ontario, she now resides in
Toronto. Her articles have appeared in several publications, including
Interracial Voice, Cats Canada, and Urban Mozaik. She welcomes feedback
on her articles.You can contact Emily at emonroy@interlog.com
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