Anyone who has ever talked to a relative who lived through that era, or read personal accounts of World War II knows that while the German forces were referred to as 'Germans,' the Japanese were called 'Japs.' Anti-Japanese propaganda often portrayed the Asian enemy in quite explicitly racist terms, because of the Japanese's 'foreign' racial status, in the eyes of most Caucasian-Americans of European ancestry. Unlike the Germans, the American government even allowed the internment of Japanese-Americans, solely because of their race, even though many Japanese-Americans fought loyally on the United States' side during the conflict. While Germans are always 'Nazis' in films, the Japanese are always 'villainous Japs' (Beidler 1998, 12).
Noting the racism that was often exhibited in American propaganda, however, hardly excuses the racism that was also present in Japanese propaganda. One interesting subgenre of this phenomenon is in Japanese films like China Nights, which portrays the Japanese conquest of China as 'good' by showing the eventual, willing submission of a beautiful Chinese woman to a Japanese officer. The member of the 'dominant' race is shown as a man and the member of the 'subordinate' race is shown as a woman. The Chinese woman, much like in a conventional movie romance, at first resists the dominant man's advances, but then discovers the pleasures of his control (Chambers & Culbert 1996, 37). The personal relationship of the Japanese man and the Chinese woman is used as a metaphor justifying Japan's conquest of China. The personal becomes a metaphor for military politics. This is particularly interesting, given that the Far East, including Japan, was often portrayed as feminine in American propaganda, and as subtle and cunning rather than overt in its advances.
When characterizing the portrayal of the two sides, Robert Fyne's book review of We'll Always have the Movies, states that after the war: "Finally there were no more two-dimensional Japanese villains wearing those coke-bottle eyeglasses, waving samurai swords, running up hills shouting...
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