Analysis Of 'The Karate Kid'

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The outside world
“You have any college in mind that you will apply to, Ngan?” It was another normal day of my senior year in high school: ten of us who were applying for U.S colleges formed a special group after class, cramming SAT and writing essays together.
“Yeah! I have my list of White schools here already. I want a school with very few or no Vietnamese students, you know. Do you want to check it out?” I hesitated as she waved the paper casually in front of me. “Just take it out a little bit,” whispered a faint voice in my head.
I stopped for a moment and wondered if I was prejudiced to look at the paper. No, it was as if I was already racially prejudiced to have considered looking at the paper.
Looking back, the application process …show more content…

One will not be stopped on the street by the police just because he or she is a minority. One will not have his or her lunch money stolen by the bullies at school just because he or she is an LGBT. People know better to just ignore those they are not in favor of. Thus, the black maids raising the white kids yet forced to used separated restrooms in “The Help” or the little boy beaten up in the street by the Cobras in “The Karate Kid” - I was not able to make sense of what I saw on TV using the social knowledge I was provided with. It was a whole different world - the world of the media, and the world of people living across the globe. We don’t even have a term for “hate crime” in Vietnam. We don’t have racism in Vietnam. We only have racism in the world, a 7pm-daily-world-news-on-TV thing. “Lucky me, brought up in such a place without all the bullying and discrimination,” I thought after watching The Karate Kid in middle …show more content…

And we all openly accept such standards of beauty. Light skin girls are more likely to win The Beauty Pageant. Dark skin girls are less likely to appear in cosmetic commercials. Actually they do in the first half of the commercials, the “before using our products” part. Those with light skin are those working in the office with ACs and driving cars, those having enough money to buy skin products. Those with dark skin are those working under the glazing sun and driving motorbikes. Light skin tone also symbolizes wealth. Let us all accept that way of reasoning and we Vietnamese can all happily and ignorantly agree that Vietnam is a colorism-free

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