Ethnic Stereotypes in popular culture involve an overly-simplified, stereotypical or false representation of the typical characteristics of a members of an ethnic group in music, literature, print media, film and the performing arts.
Music
In recent years, ethnic stereotypes in popular music have come under fire. This is often associated with Hip Hop culture, but goes back much further; Prince for example was widely criticized for his portrayals of African American women, particularly, in his music videos.
Movies
For years, Hollywood's unofficial but de facto casting policy limited actors of color to character roles based on ethnic stereotypes. These roles ranged from bit parts to supporting roles or secondary leads.
One cliché in American war movies depicting United States soldiers in World War II is that they very frequently create self-consciously "diverse" teams of soldiers that end up as ethnic stereotypes themselves. Central casting will assign each featured military unit a Jewish-American, an Irish-American, an Italian-American, and a caucasian with a Southern or rural accent; in more recent films, these units will also be assigned a Latino and an African-American. This tradition lives on in more recent World War II movies such as John Woo's Windtalkers, in which the Native American characters are contrasted against the standard-issue ethnically mixed unit.
In the 1970s, a series of feature films that came to be known as blacksploitation movies brought stereotypical black American culture to the screen. Proponents argued that at least African American actors were getting work in leading roles, opponents believed the perpetuating of stereotypes was more harmful than helpful.
In the 1990s, film director Spike Lee received critism for his portrayals of African-American females based on ethnic stereotype. In the same decade, Quentin Tarantino was castigated for casting Pam Grier in a 'blackspoitation'-type role (Jackie Brown), particularly by African American male film directors. Feminists rallied to the director's and the actress' defence, countering that the same black male directors did not themselves make a point of providing work for black actresses.
List of stock film roles based on ethnic stereotypes:
- submissive Asian female
- black maid (similarly, "mammy")
- lazy black man
- subservient black man (see Uncle Tom)
- black butler
- British butler
- petty criminal (African American, Latino, Italian)
- Mexican sidekick
- Italian gangster
- Chinese launderer
- Asian computer expert or nerd
- Asian (usually Chinese) cook
- 'houseboy' (Asian, African)
- Noble Savage (American Indian, African)
- American Indian sidekick
- bearer (African, Asian)
- magical negro
- black bodyguard
- Asian streetracer
- Irish Cop
- Irish Drunk
List of significant stereotypical characters in television:
Note: Although cast in stereotypical roles, both Marla Gibbs and Robert Guillaume successfully played them against type. Yoko Shimada's character was well-rounded and erudite.
List of significant stereotypical characters in film:
List of significant stereotypical roles in literature: