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DARE TO ASK: Distinguishing traits of Asian subgroups?

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

How do you differentiate between different Asians, i.e. Korean, Japanese, Filipino, Vietnamese, etc.?

Rachel, 36, white, Canada

Replies

Good luck. I’m Asian and I can barely tell. What complicates matters is intermarriage between different ethnicities. Also, the Chinese have migrated throughout history to many parts of Asia, giving their genetic material to other people.

Siggy, Newport Beach, Calif.

Generally people from mainland China or Korea tend to be a little taller, have the stereotypical “squinty” Asian eyes and are fairer. Southern Asians are shorter, darker-skinned and have larger, round eyes. Vietnamese people tend to be pretty fair, with large eyes, but they tend to be quite small on average, and Japanese people are also fairly short and tend to be fairer, with squinty eyes.

J., 21, Asian, Canada

Environment plays a big part, too. For example, Koreans or Chinese who were born or raised in Japan look very Japanese, and the ethnic Japanese who were left in China as infants after World War II look very Chinese. And Japanese-Americans, especially third- or fourth-generation, look different from Japanese people in Japan because they have grown up speaking English, smiling and laughing like Americans, and this shows in their facial expressions and behavior.

David, 35, Eurasian, Tokyo

Expert says

Try as we did to sweet-talk UCLA anthropologist Kyeyoung Park into making massive generalizations about physical differences among Asian subgroups, we only got a few.

“It’s not easy to tell differences among Asians,” she said. “Race is not scientifically valid, and there’s so much overlap that I can’t really generalize with much accuracy.”

Darn. Nonetheless:

— Vietnamese-Americans do tend to be somewhat taller than their counterparts in Vietnam, which Park theorizes might be from a better diet in the U.S.

— Some Koreans and Chinese can have rounder faces than other Asians.

— Southern Chinese are shorter and thinner; northern Chinese are taller, as are Koreans.

While physiological differences can be hard to pin down, differences in appearance that occur because of culture, economics or migration are easier to pick out, she said.

For example, the Japanese were among the first Asians to become more affluent and take on Western styles, and it showed in their hair, makeup, style of dress and more. Then Koreans, who were under Japanese colonial rule from 1910-1945, came into their own and began to catch up.

Now the trend is to retain ethnicity and not go for Westernization, Park noted.

“Even in plastic surgery, in the past they would ask doctors to make them look like a Western model. But now patients are asking to keep their look, not having eyelid surgery, or if they have their nose done, they don’t want a ‘high’ nose anymore – they just want to improve it.”

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