U.S.-Sino relations: nationalism, racism and worries about what China's emergence.

The anti-China bias, racism, and xenophobia in America is really messed up...
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For China's artists, the selection of Lei as the lead sculptor for the [MLK Sculpture], to be unveiled in 2009 on the Mall, is a triumphant moment. It is a recognition of how rapidly their status has progressed in the generation that has grown up since the repressive years of the Cultural Revolution.

Not everyone feels this way.

Atlanta resident Lea Winfrey Young says the "outsourcing" by U.S. companies and organizations to China has gone too far this time. She and her husband, Gilbert Young, a painter, are leading a group of critics who argue that an African American -- or any American -- should have been picked for such an important project.

"Dr. King's statue is to be shipped here in a crate that supposedly says 'Made in China.' That's just obscene," Winfrey Young says.

By awarding the contract to a Chinese artist, the foundation financing the project has touched on sensitivities at the core of U.S.-Sino relations: nationalism, racism and worries about what China's emergence as an economic and cultural world power means for America.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/
article
/2007/08/14/AR2007081401691.html?hpid=topnews

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