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  1. #1
    Senior Member Ratbstard's Avatar
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    'We're a culture, not a costume' this Halloween

    'We're a culture, not a costume' this Halloween

    cnn.com
    By Emanuella Grinberg,
    CNN
    updated 9:44 AM EST, Wed October 26, 2011



    (CNN) -- Thinking about donning a kimono to dress like a geisha for Halloween, or a Mexican mariachi suit?

    Students from Ohio University have a message for you: "We're a culture, not a costume."

    With ethnic and racial stereotypes becoming increasingly popular Halloween costume themes, members of the school's Students Teaching About Racism in Society are launching a campaign to make revelers think twice before reducing a culture to a caricature, the group's president said.

    Posters from the campaign are expected to go up on the Athens, Ohio, campus Wednesday. Meanwhile, the images are making the rounds online, raising debate over whether it's ever OK for people to paint their faces black or red or impersonate a racial stereotype for fun and where to drawn the line.

    It's a seasonal point of controversy, but even after widely publicized controversies such as the "Ghetto Fab" wig at Kohl's and Target's illegal alien jumpsuit, costumes of stereotypes abound. On Google's shopping section, several pages of Mexican costume ideas are available, from gauchos and "Mexican donkey costumes" to sexy serapes and tequila shooter girls.

    The ad campaign from Ohio University show students holding photos of different racial and ethnic stereotypes in costume: an Hispanic guy with a picture of the Mexican donkey costume, an Asian girl with an image of a Geisha, a Muslim student with a photo of a white guy wearing a traditional ghutra and iqal over his head, bombs strapped to his chest.

    "During Halloween, we see offensive costumes. We don't like it, we don't appreciate it. We wanted to do a campaign about it saying, 'Hey, think about this. It's offensive,'" said senior Sarah Williams, president of STARS.

    "The best way to get rid of stereotypes and racism is to have a discussion and raise awareness, which is what we want to do with this campaign," said Williams, who is black and plans on dressing as singer Janelle Monae for Halloween.

    The most obvious offense occurs when someone who's not black decides to go blackface, because of the historical context, she said. But the message applies to all races and stereotypes -- and not just during Halloween.

    The dean of students fully supported the campaign, calling it a "clean, succinct" way of delivering an important message.

    "We've always tried to get a handle on what it means to be thoughtful and appropriate when it comes to talking to students about choosing costumes and making the best decisions for celebrating Halloween," Ryan Lombardi said.

    "I think it's a clean way of raising awareness of how the costumes you choose might be offensive. In many cases, students aren't doing it maliciously, but they might not realize the consequences of their actions on others."

    The campaign has gone viral, landing on blogs and other schools' online publications. So far, the response in the editorial sections has been positive. But in the comment sections, not everyone thinks it's a message that needs to be reinforced.

    "Suddenly, I am overcome with the urge to dress up as the Frito Bandito this year," one comment on the Arizona Daily Wildcat's piece on the campaign said. "Guys & girls -- Halloween is just bit of fun. Dead guys don't come back to life and eat people. There are no hot blonde lady cops in tiny uniforms that demand to 'frisk' you. Kimonos are OK even if 'Asians' don't wear them on a daily basis."

    But others think it's a message that needs to be repeated.

    "I think it's almost impossible to be ironic while being racist, so irony is lost," said Jelani Cobb, a professor of African studies at Rutgers University and the author of "The Substance of Hope: Barack Obama and the Paradox of Progress."

    "To treat a character like Batman or Superman as a Halloween costume is one thing, but to treat an entire ethnicity as a costume is something else. It suggests that people conflate the actual broad diversity of a culture with caricatures and characters."

    While Italian-Americans can be stereotyped as gangsters and Irish-Americans as hard drinkers, there are no pervasive stereotypes for whites on the same level that allow for them to be caricatured as a Halloween costume, Cobb said.

    "The more we look at people as caricatures, the harder it is to operate as democracy," he said. "What underlies this kind of costuming is the belief that these people aren't quite equal to what we are or aren't as American as we are or that you as a person who's not member of that group should be able to dictate how painful stereotype should be."

    http://www.cnn.com/2011/10/26/living/ha ... index.html
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  2. #2
    Senior Member SicNTiredInSoCal's Avatar
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    What if one of these kids wants to dress like a cowboy? The American west is part of MY culture and I'm supposed to be offended? Somebody call the whaaaambulance!
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  3. #3
    Senior Member southBronx's Avatar
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    well Halloween did get out of hand . Im from NYC & any one on
    this web site can tell you we american city kids never did this
    we would ring door bell or get power In a sock with a rock
    or water balloon & hit some one with it
    we never had Costume if we did we made our own
    & it was better then , why it all about money
    & now I see this guy want Halloween On sat that a good one
    you see every one don't like the way we have it to SBB

    Halloween is for kids let them ring the bell . let them be KID
    we all did this on thankgiveing day we all say any thing for
    Thank giveing .Im going back In the 40 & we all had fun
    Happy Halloween kids Have fun but check the candy
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  4. #4
    Senior Member ReggieMay's Avatar
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    Sorry folks, but if you continue to make clowns of yourselves marching in the streets, waving flags and making demands, you've brought it upon yourselves.
    "A Nation of sheep will beget a government of Wolves" -Edward R. Murrow

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  5. #5
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    I know some old, fat white guys who don't want anyone dressing up as Santa Claus at Christmas! UNITE!

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