Taboo or Tabula Rasa: Cross-Racial/Cultural Dating Preferences amongst Chinese, Japanese, and Korean International Students in an American University

International students bring racial attitudes and group preferences that affect campus climates. Forty-seven Chinese, Japanese, and Korean college international students were interviewed, regarding their perceptions of race/ethnicity and nationality, when it comes to dating and romantic relationship...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zachary S. Ritter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of International Students 2015-10-01
Series:Journal of International Students
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/404
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spelling doaj-7c6d3a7dac3541fd8b749564fc04269d2020-11-25T00:58:12ZengJournal of International StudentsJournal of International Students2162-31042166-37502015-10-0154405419404Taboo or Tabula Rasa: Cross-Racial/Cultural Dating Preferences amongst Chinese, Japanese, and Korean International Students in an American UniversityZachary S. Ritter0University of Redlands, United StatesInternational students bring racial attitudes and group preferences that affect campus climates. Forty-seven Chinese, Japanese, and Korean college international students were interviewed, regarding their perceptions of race/ethnicity and nationality, when it comes to dating and romantic relationships on college campuses. Thirty-five out of forty-seven students interviewed said they would ideally want to date someone from their own cultural background, so that communication gaps would not occur, but when probed beyond language barriers, international students appeared to have a racial hierarchy when it came to dating. Students were not only influenced by parental approval of dating partners, but also US media images that helped create a racial hierarchy of dating and cultural capital. White Americans were the most desirable dating partner for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean international students; Asian-Americans were slightly below white Americans, while African-American, Latino, and Southeast Asian students were the least desirous.http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/404interracial datingAsian international studentscross-cultural interactionsracial attitudesstereotype reduction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zachary S. Ritter
spellingShingle Zachary S. Ritter
Taboo or Tabula Rasa: Cross-Racial/Cultural Dating Preferences amongst Chinese, Japanese, and Korean International Students in an American University
Journal of International Students
interracial dating
Asian international students
cross-cultural interactions
racial attitudes
stereotype reduction
author_facet Zachary S. Ritter
author_sort Zachary S. Ritter
title Taboo or Tabula Rasa: Cross-Racial/Cultural Dating Preferences amongst Chinese, Japanese, and Korean International Students in an American University
title_short Taboo or Tabula Rasa: Cross-Racial/Cultural Dating Preferences amongst Chinese, Japanese, and Korean International Students in an American University
title_full Taboo or Tabula Rasa: Cross-Racial/Cultural Dating Preferences amongst Chinese, Japanese, and Korean International Students in an American University
title_fullStr Taboo or Tabula Rasa: Cross-Racial/Cultural Dating Preferences amongst Chinese, Japanese, and Korean International Students in an American University
title_full_unstemmed Taboo or Tabula Rasa: Cross-Racial/Cultural Dating Preferences amongst Chinese, Japanese, and Korean International Students in an American University
title_sort taboo or tabula rasa: cross-racial/cultural dating preferences amongst chinese, japanese, and korean international students in an american university
publisher Journal of International Students
series Journal of International Students
issn 2162-3104
2166-3750
publishDate 2015-10-01
description International students bring racial attitudes and group preferences that affect campus climates. Forty-seven Chinese, Japanese, and Korean college international students were interviewed, regarding their perceptions of race/ethnicity and nationality, when it comes to dating and romantic relationships on college campuses. Thirty-five out of forty-seven students interviewed said they would ideally want to date someone from their own cultural background, so that communication gaps would not occur, but when probed beyond language barriers, international students appeared to have a racial hierarchy when it came to dating. Students were not only influenced by parental approval of dating partners, but also US media images that helped create a racial hierarchy of dating and cultural capital. White Americans were the most desirable dating partner for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean international students; Asian-Americans were slightly below white Americans, while African-American, Latino, and Southeast Asian students were the least desirous.
topic interracial dating
Asian international students
cross-cultural interactions
racial attitudes
stereotype reduction
url http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/404
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