BEIJING â" Sports Illustrated magazineâs Swimsuit issue has drawn criticism from feminists and other women, and some men, for unnecessarily sexualizing women and exhibiting bad taste. Or good taste, depending on your point of view.
But in the new, 2013 issue, the use of non-westerners as âethnic propsâ for the often white women in teeny-weeny bikinis is rousing new ire and raising the question: has the magazine gone too far Are the images racist, as well as sexually exploitative Take a closer look at the images, here on Yahooâs Shine site.
Two of these photos were taken in China. One is of the blonde model Anne V. on a river raft somewhere near Guilin, in Yunnan province the southwest, with an aged, grey-bearded Chinese man who looks like heâs partially toothless and is wearing baggy gray clothes and black gum boots. Heâs pulling on an oar. (The image on our site shows a different model.)
This âchick on the raftâ image is one of the âsaddest/funniestâ in the magazine, commented someone named Dora Breckinridge on Jezebel, a feminist blog that says it aims to be fun while handling womenâs issues with intelligence and sensitivity.
In Jezebel, Dodai Stewart wrote: âA white person relaxing, a person of color working. Tale as old as time.â
Ms. Stewart continued: âThis photo cements stereotypes, perpetuates an imbalance in the power dynamic, is reminiscent of centuries of colonialism (and indentured servitude) and serves as a good example of both creating a centrality of whiteness and using âexoticâ people as fash! ion props.â
The other image picked out by Ms. Breckinridge is âthe one with all the little girls in China,â apparently taken in southwestern Guangxi province. There, a model stands among a dozen young girls wearing elaborate ethnic dress. Theyâre far shorter than the model is. She isnât looking at the children. The contrast between her near-nudity and their heavy-looking costumes is almost comical. As the Shanghaiist, a popular China-based blog, puts it: âIn the 2013 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition, Chinese people are exotic props.â
In Jezebel, Ms. Stewart wrote of the image:
âThe model, Jessica Gomes, is Australian, but her father is from Portugal and her mother is from Singapore. Since sheâs part Asian, it could be argued that this shot is not about what Gwen Sharp at Sociological Images calls the centrality of whiteness. Yet the model, in Western clothes (howevr skimpy that suit may be), is placed in the center as a contrast to the children in non-Western clothes. It renders them âexotic,â a spectacle. In addition, the model is not interacting with the kids. Classic case of othering. Also: People are not props.â
As the Shanghaiist notes: âFor Sports Illustrated, China is poverty and âethnicâ clothing, not the worldâs second-largest economy where the majority of people live in cities rather than the countryside.â
Others agree.
âBrave, Sports Illustrated, for de-humanizing your fellow global citizens in the name boobs and bikinsâ (sic.) âI hope everybody got paid properly for their human prop services,â wrote Angry Asian Man in his blog.
(Hereâs some self-description of the blogger with the ! slightly ! alarming name: âIâm not as angry as you think,â he writes on his site. âIâm not here sitting in front of the computer, hating âwhiteyâ and plotting revolution. This is just a subject that has always interested me â" pointing out racism.â)
Of course, there have been sighs of despair at the politically-correct nature of the debate, as there always are.
Hereâs one, from someone called Pete, one of thousands on Yahooâs Shine site: âThey are not âminoritiesâ when they are in their own country. What a bunch of pc dopes we have here in the US.â
Said John S: âWow, some people need to lighten up. I see pictures of pretty girls in bathing suits. I give it about 1 second and no deeper thought. I spend no time analyzing the back ground scenery, people or not.â
Jamba went for a funny one, noting: âThere are other people in the photos I guess my eyeswere fixated elsewhere.â