Essay On The Yellow Peril

Words: 568
Pages: 3

For this reason, the inept caricatures of Nazis and their invasion of the homeland are based upon a fear of losing one's’ own agency, coinciding how “there was palpable anxiety that American citizens themselves might support Hitler and destabilize national security” (Steinmetz, 197).

The Nazis are identifiable with their Nazi swastikas on their coat arms, as well as by their guns aimed and shooting at CA. Their eyes — always closed or concealed by shadows — along with the eerily identicalness of each soldier representing how Americans believed their fascist lifestyle was their only true notable fault. Each bullet fired at the Captain misses, his flagged shield — symbolic of the nation’s defences — protecting him with great ease. The whole scene depicted in figure 1 is allegorical for how America itself would be vastly superior if they were only to join in combat with the Allies to defeat the Nazis, as not even a bullet could pierce our defences.
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Due to discriminatory laws, Japanese Americans experienced heightened criminalization while concurrently being where the Yellow Peril was being propagated by . Then, fueled by the racial sentiments of the war, these conditions worsened with the introduction of negative asian depictions into comics such as Captain America, which naturalized the demonization of all Japanese individuals.

The Yellow Peril is literally exemplified by the intense yellow color of the Japanese soldiers in figure 2, the same hue that’s used for the bricks walls. This validates the anxieties Americans may already have or are beginning to adopt as the media — including Captain America Comics — popularizes the xenophobia of the Japanese, only serving to strengthen and normalize the perceived irreconcilable differences between ‘us’ and