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Blood types and hierarchies Racism against black people in Korea comes  from many sources: Korean ethnic nationalism  and xenophobia, which touch all foreigners here;  centuries of isolation that kept Koreans apart  from other races; a traditional valorization of the  color white; Confucianism; and most of all, racism  imported from the United States of America. It is still a widely held belief here that the Korean  people are defined by their shared blood, according  to Stanford sociology professor Shin Gi-wook. This  belief is then applied to other countries — and for  the U.S., that means Americans should be white. Many Koreans also believe that blood is a definer  of personality — it used to be very common for  Koreans to ask, “What’s your blood type?” even in  job interviews. It still happens occasionally. Once blood is used as a personality indicator,  it’s not a big leap to viewing races as inherently  different, just as people with different blood types  are, says Nadia Kim. Kim, who wrote the book  “Imperial Citizens: Koreans and Race from Seoul  to LA” (2008) on how Koreans perceive race, says  using blood as a definer of personality “biologizes  race.” “It creates a category system based on a  biological division and hierarchy of humans that has  been totally disproven,” she says. But Korea still  invests ideas in blood type — “that it determines  intelligence, character, athletic ability, morality and  so on.” Kim points out that the idea of “race” itself is  merely a social construction. People look different  because of social evolution and where their  ancestors are from, not because of blood or blood  type. Despite proof that there are no biological  differences between races — beyond skin color,  eye shape and other superficial differences — race  is still used as a means to justify racism and affects  how people interact with each other.  Koreans have also historically elevated white  as a “pure” color, which benefits the light-skinned  nobility over dark-skinned peasants, Kim says. The  pure white hanbok was also associated with the  Korean ethnicity. “There were meanings associated with the  color white — peace, being a peaceful people,  purity,” says Kim, who notes this judgment has  been carried out in many societies worldwide. “I  don’t think this is unimportant, particularly when it  intersects with an American and global order that  puts white people on top.” Confucianism, which has been Korea’s national  ideology since the 14th century, orders everyone  into five unequal relationships. It does not have  a category for race. But race can be applied to  the equation, and certain races can be seen as  higher or lower in the Confucian hierarchy based  on their perceived job status, income or similar  factors. “Even if ‘immigrant status’ or ‘racial status’  is not explicit as one of the five relationships (the  hierarchy system) informs it,” Kim says. www.groovekorea.com / February 2014 32 Edited by Elaine Ramirez (elaine@groovekorea.com) InsIGhT Blackface became associated with  comedy in Korea with TV’s popular  ‘sikeomeonseu’ routine. It was  stopped before the Olympics for fear  of upsetting African athletes, but  reemerged in force in 2003 with the  Bubble Sisters.