The Sinister Chinese
The Sinister Chinese
The Sinister Chinese
Anna-Leena Lhde
Englantilaisen filologian pro gradu- tutkielma
Helsingin yliopisto
15.3.2012
Table of Contents:
Appendix
Bibliography
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1. The Call of the East - Introduction
The Chinese have been portrayed as harmless fools, devious drug dealers and finally
nefarious villains in 19th and early 20th century popular literature. What has remained
constant is that they have been more often than not depicted as criminals and inscrutable
creatures from the Far East. Political events have shaped the portrayal of ethnic
characters and Chinese character stereotypes in particular. The sudden shift from the
passive, foolish portrayal that is common in late 19th century characters to the active,
aggressive and intimidating portrayal typical in early 20th century characters was caused
by the outbreak of the Boxer Uprising in China. The rebellion affected Western colonial
efforts as well as the internal political situation in China. The Yellow Peril, namely the
anxiety toward Far Eastern immigration to the West and later, the rising military
prowess of the Far East, significantly affected the portrayal of the Chinese and caused a
widespread sense of fear and distrust to be about the Chinese. Politics played a part in
influencing the depiction of the Chinese in the United States and in Great Britain,
because in the late 19th century the public image of the Chinese was used to influence
public opinion concerning colonial ambitions in the Far East. Popular literature
featuring the Chinese was even used as a source of propaganda to point public opinion
in a more favourable direction concerning the colonial ambitions of both Great Britain
and the United States. In the early 20th century a new stereotype replaced the old to
accommodate the changed needs of the White West, this time representing the Chinese
as an antagonist and as a source of both fear and anxiety.
My intention is to show through a series of close readings of late 19th century and early
20th century popular literature, how the image of the Chinese as an ethnic group
changed from a passive lazy sexual deviant into an intelligent, sinister, violent villain in
the beginning of the 20th century and how the violent political upheavals in colonial
China, such as the Boxer Uprising, brought about this shift in perspective, both in
fiction and reality. First I will define and discuss 19th century representation of the
Chinese and show how they were used in political propaganda and popular literature
alike to direct public opinion, reflecting the dissatisfaction the white majority felt
toward Chinese immigration. The texts dealing with the late 19th century will focus
solely on the United States, although such stereotypes and propaganda existed in Great
Britain as well. The second part of my thesis deals with the new stereotype and how
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international politics affected the shift from the old stereotype to the new. Both
stereotypes dealt with the fears the White West felt toward the inscrutable East, but the
new stereotype included a fear of counter colonialism. The early 20th century stereotype
is a distinct change from the 19th century stereotype, and the second section of my thesis
attempts to discover how the new stereotype gained popularity and why the old
stereotype was replaced. The second section will also discuss the effect of the Yellow
Peril the Western fear of threat from the East on the development of the new stereotype
and the qualities that the old and the new stereotype have in common.
The texts, I have chosen come from of late 19th and early 20th century popular
literature, and feature two characters; John Chinaman, who represents the old stereotype
and Fu-Manchu, who becomes the personification of the new stereotype. The John
Chinaman texts include, poems, songs and short stories, which all feature John
Chinaman, or a character that has another name, but is an example of the same
stereotype in another guise. They are all from mid 19th to the late 19th century and are
all American texts. The texts dealing with the new stereotype deal solely with Fu-
Manchu, who is perhaps the most famous and most iconic representation of the new
Chinese stereotype in the early 20th century.
How John Chinaman evolved into Fu-Manchu and what brought about this change is
the focal point of my thesis. The similarities and differences between the two characters
show how Fu-Manchu still remains a submissive to the dominant white West despite
the radical change in both the portrayal of the Chinese as a minority and the attitudes
and the effect of the Yellow Peril. I intend to discuss and analyze the two characters
through textual material and also include discussion of the historical events and political
issues that affected the development of both the public image and the literary portrayal
of the Chinese. The textual material I have selected for my thesis has been divided into
two groups. The first deals with John Chinaman in several different forms; poetry, short
stories, illustrations and songs. All the John Chinaman texts used in my thesis are by
different authors, because John Chinaman was not a single authors creation, but rather
a popular stock caricature used by many different authors and artists. The best-known
author to feature John Chinaman in his work is the American novelist Mark Twain. His
short sketch: John Chinaman in New York was influenced by Bret Hartes poem
Plain Language from Truthful James, which became very influential in both the anti-
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Chinese movement and late nineteenth century popular literature. For this reason
Hartes poem is discussed in my thesis and Twains sketch is not. I have divided the
John Chinaman material into three themes, the Gold Rush theme, the cheap Chinese
labour theme and the seducer / corrupter theme. The Fu-Manchu section consists of
analysis and discussion of Fu-Manchu as a character. The textual material used in the
analysis consists of Sax Rohmers first three novels in the Fu-Manchu series: The
Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu (1913), The Devil Doctor (1916) and The Si-Fan Mysteries
(1917). They are all set in London and follow a loosely continuous plot focussed on Fu-
Manchus relentless attempts to conquer the world.
I have chosen Edward Saids Orientalism as my main theoretical source, because all the
texts discussed in my thesis are written by Orientalist authors and are connected to
colonialism and controlling the subject races. Saids Orientalism as a method of study
is necessary to understand the way 19th and early 20th century Western whites saw
China, namely as fantasy and source of what can be called an exotic and secretive
Other. The John Chinaman texts deal with colonialism through the United States
colonial ambitions and domestic disappointment and dissatisfaction with sudden
widespread Chinese immigration. Sax Rohmer was an Orientlist author whose interests
towards the East were coloured by Western fantasies of Oriental mystique and the Fu-
Manchu novels are filled with visions of this mystique. Said concentrates on the near
East and especially Egypt in his text and has been critiqued by such commentators as
Zhang Lonxi and Arif Dirlik that his theory does not include the Far East as a part of
Orientalism. Orientalism has also been criticized for focussing on the male aspect of
Orientalism to the exclusion of women. Some critics believe that Saids theories can be
applied to the Far East as well as the Near East, because Orientalist attitudes, studies
and books were equally Eurocentric and based on fantasies rather than reality when
dealing with the Far East. In Orientalist texts and studies China became a mystical and
exotic place that was impenetrable and inscrutable to the West. The general dislike and
condescension the colonizing West felt toward an effeminate and asexual China
was very similar to their attitudes toward the Near East. Using Said, my thesis analyses
stereotypes of the Chinese, why they were constructed in the way they were and what
purpose these portrayals served.
There arent many academic studies dealing with either John Chinaman or Fu-Manchu.
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Gary Scharnhorst and Margaret Duckett have studied Bret Harte and his literary works
but neither has focussed their attention purely on Plain Language from Truthful
James, although both have discussed how it relates to the anti-Chinese movement.
Scharnhorst is one of the few scholars who have made an extensive study of Harte.
Otherwise there is very little research on John Chinaman or Chinese caricature
characters, except yellow face performances. Many scholars mention the term John
Chinaman as a reference to the Chinese as an ethnic group, such as John Kuo Wei
Tchen and Rober G. Lee; Lee has done some work on popular songs and poems
featuring Chinese characters; but on a more general level not much further research has
been done on John Chinaman or the way the character became widely known in the 19th
century. The connection between how John Chinaman was used in propaganda and
popular literature alike has not garnered much interest or been studied almost at all. The
situation is very similar in the case of Fu-Manchu. Sax Rohmers yellow villains
reputation as a racist pulp character has left him in very low esteem and there has been
little interest or inclination for academic study on the Fu-Manchu thrillers or the
character himself. The Fu-Manchu thrillers have been often associated with racism and
disposable pulp entertainment. This is enough to distance most researchers from them.
Despite the negative reputation there are some academic studies that discuss Fu-
Manchu. Urmilla Seshagiri, James L. Hevia and David Shih have all researched either
the Fu-Manchu thrillers or the character itself to some extent, but they mostly show
more interest toward Denis Nayland Smith, Fu-Manchus British nemesis and the hero
of the series than the nefarious devil doctor himself. Seshagiri deals with the Yellow
Peril phenomena itself and Fu-Manchu as its personification but she doesnt delve very
deeply into the thrillers themselves or Fu-Manchu as a character. Somewhat the same
can be said of David Shih, although he does give more emphasis to Rohmers villain
than any of the others. None of them have researched Fu-Manchus relation to previous
depictions of Chinese characters, although David Shih does mention the Boxer uprising
and the effect it had on how the West began to see the East.
In this sense my thesis deals with a subject that has not been discussed in much detail in
the field. The way Chinese stereotypes and caricatures have been used in the popular
media, especially literature, to help guide public opinion in a more positive direction
towards both political and colonial goals is something that has not been researched
extensively. My thesis discusses the development and change of Chinese stereotypes
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and caricatures from the Orientalist subdued Other to the threatening yellow villain, and
bring a new perspective and new information into the field of Chinese caricatures. Both
19th century Chinese characters and 20th century characters have been studied
individually and as a part of a larger phenomenon, such as the anti-Chinese Movement,
but they have not been studied as individual topics in their own right. My thesis
discusses the development and depiction of both stock Chinese caricatures and the first
and most iconic Chinese villain, which is what the caricature becomes. My thesis thus
analyzes the evolution of a literary stereotype and how historical events affected that
evolution and drove it to the form it did
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2. I Welcomed You From Canton John But I Wish I Hadn't Though
John Chinaman is the name of a stock character, which was used to depict the Chinese
as an ethnic group in Anglo-American and British literature and popular songs during
the 19th and early 20th centuries. John Chinaman was used as a means of propaganda
aimed to manoeuvre people into supporting the United States colonial ambitions
abroad, at first mainly in China. Later these interests were expanded into including other
areas in Asia as well, such as the Philippines. The colonial assumption was, as Edward
Said (34) states, that the colonized wanted to be colonized. John Chinaman proved
useful for other purposes of propaganda as well. The anti-Chinese movement in the
United States used John Chinaman effectively to both pander to peoples frustrations
and direct their anger towards the Chinese as low-wage labourers. It succeeded in its
goal to prevent the Chinese from immigrating to the United States and restricting both
their civil rights, working opportunities, naturalization and possibilities of
entrepreneurship, in part thanks to their clever use of the John Chinaman character. The
propaganda in which John Chinaman appeared included, but was not limited to, popular
songs, literature, poems and caricatures.
Because of the variety of purposes that John Chinaman fulfilled, the stories, songs and
poems he appears in can be divided into three themes; the gold rush theme, the coolie /
cheap Chinese labour theme and finally the seducer / corrupter theme. Most, if not all of
the material that he appeared in was closely linked to the political situation of the time,
whether it concerned Chinese cooliesm, or wage slavery, immigration or interracial
marriage. During the course of this section my aim is to describe the defining
characteristics of John Chinaman as a representation of the racist attitudes of the
dominant white Anglo-American Protestant culture. In addition, I will analyze textual
material representing each of the three themes during this section. Though the image of
John Chinaman was used in both Britain and the United States, both the historical
background and the textual material used in this section concern the characters
incarnation in the United States.
The John Chinaman character gained notoriety and popularity especially in the United
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States after a sudden peak in Chinese immigration triggered by the discovery of gold at
Sutters Mill in California in 1848. According to John Kuo Wei Tchen, many
immigrants came to the United States with the hopes of getting rich and then returning
home with their newfound wealth, the Chinese among them (170). By 1849 the
California Gold Rush had begun in earnest and California was soon flooded with
hopeful miners-to-be. They all had the same dream; to strike it big. California was seen
as an idyllic white haven without slavery or the Chinese (Lee 19). The general dislike of
the Chinese as an ethnic group and the idea that Californian gold was our gold, or
rather white gold, led to the Chinese being excluded either by law or violence from
mining active claims. They often moved to already abandoned ones and managed to
make a small profit by sheer tenacity (Tchen 170 and Lee 48). This caused envy and
disgruntlement in those white miners who had not succeeded in their own attempts to
work more profitable claims. Chinese immigration in the United States was not a
smooth process; it was riddled with conflicts and problems. The Chinese performed low
wage-labour at businesses such as laundries and restaurants.
The Chinese had a habit of isolating themselves into closed-off enclaves in cities such
as San Francisco. These enclaves were small neighbourhoods that later came to be
called Chinatowns. This behaviour and a perceived refusal to integrate lead to an
increasing disdain for the Chinese. In the 1860s the Chinese were used as members of
labour gangs and strike breakers of the Central Pacific railroad. The Chinese were seen
as a growing problem and in 1877, a Californian labour leader Dennis Kearney from the
Workingmans Party, a radical anti-Chinese an anti-monopoly party, began its anti-
Chinese agenda and used popular songs as a means of anti-Chinese propaganda (Lee 62
and 70). The anti-Chinese movement started as an issue of contract labor but in the
1870s it became a national movement that opposed Chinese immigration, labour,
entrepreneurship and naturalization (Tchen 170). The Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882 is
one of the most significant laws that restricted Chinese immigration. It banned Chinese
laborers and miners from immigrating into the United States for the next ten years
(Thcen 278). Chinese non-laborers had to have a certification from the Chinese
government that qualified them for immigration. Chinese people already living in the
United States needed a certification for re-entry to continue their stay in the country and
Chinese immigrants were excluded from citizenship. The Exclusion Act had several
incarnations over the decades right until 1943, when the Chinese Exclusion Act was
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repeated. Only after the Immigration Act of 1965 did legislation shift towards a less
restrictive form of Chinese immigration.
John Chinaman was not only the name of a fictional character; because of a naming
phenomenon that the Chinese adopted in the United States in the 19th century, it became
linked to the Chinese as an ethnic group as well. Cheng-Tsu Wu states that every
Chinese person was commonly referred to as John in California (2). Furthermore Tchen
mentions that when the Chinese decided to take English names, they usually chose the
name John (Tchen 230). Between the years 1855 and 1870 the number of Chinese men
named John went up from half the population to two thirds (Tchen 230). Tchen
proposes several explanations for such a naming tradition, such as the popularity of
John as an Anglo-American name, an attempt to integrate into the dominant society and
missionaries selecting John as a name in baptisms (Tchen 230). Against this
background the development of John Chinaman is both interesting and significant.
The Chinese were not the only group that was referred to in such a way. As Tchen puts
it John Chinaman was probably named in the same manner as John Bull or Jack Tar1
(Tchen 231). The name was in use as early as 1845, when it appeared for the first time
in a New York newspaper headline, and by 1869 it was in common use (Tchen 231). A
stereotypic term like Celestial and the earlier Mandarin, John was used both in ordinary
references to any Chinese man and in patronizing or humorous contexts (Tchen 231).
It is difficult to determine when the name became associated with a caricature character
and who was the first author to make that transition, but during the latter half of the 19th
century songs, poems and caricatures began to circulate widely, not only in California,
but in other parts of the United States as well. At the end of the 19th century political
unrest and violence in China forced both the United States and Britain to re-evaluate
their existing attitudes and stereotypes of the Chinese. The passive, foolish but
relatively harmless John Chinaman no longer fit into the changing worldview at the
time or the context of the Yellow Peril. He was soon to be replaced by a more modern
stereotype, a fiendish Devil Doctor. One of the last appearances of the name John
Chinaman was in 1913 in Dickinson G. Lowess Letters from John Chinaman.
1
John Bull was a national stereotype of Great Britain in general and England especially. Jack Tar was a
stereotype of sailors in the merchant marine or Royal navy.
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John Chinaman is a representation of all the stereotypes that both British and American
whites associated with the Chinese. The majority of the stereotypes were highly
negative and their purpose was to direct public opinion towards the Chinese concerning
current political issues such as colonialism, labour, immigration and interracial
relationships. Racial theory and racial hierarchies became widely researched and
popular in the 19th century with the agenda of permanently establishing the supremacy
of the white race. They also contributed heavily to what qualities became associated
with Chinese stereotypes. At this point it is important to define whom 19th century
Americans considered to be white, because this definition was not as clear-cut as it
would seem to a casual observer. The United States defined its social structure by using
a hierarchy of race or ethnic groups, which basically meant being against people of
colour and pro-white. The Roman Catholic Irish, who were despised by Protestant
whites, managed to rank higher than non-whites but were still not quite white. They
were able to elevate themselves in the social hierarchy simply by placing another ethnic
group below their own (Tchen 221).
Questions of racial hierarchy and rank gave birth to several race theories during the 19th
century, which were determined to erase any perceived ambiguity. The writings of
French aristocrat Joseph-Arthur de Gobineau, which dealt with hierarchies and abilities
assigned according to race and the Victorian science of phrenology, were two of the
most popular. The general idea of phrenology was that hierarchies could be established
among races based on the shapes of their skulls and facial features (Tchen 148).
Physically, John Chinaman was defined as a representative of the yellow race. He was a
short, thin, effeminate and both physically and mentally weak man. He had a long queue
or braid, buck teeth and slanted eyes. The yellow race is defined as follows;
(Blue 100)
It is needless to say that the mental and physical characteristics that Gobineau
associated with the white race were far superior to those of the yellow race. According
to Said, Anglo-Americans saw Orientals as their opposite in every respect (38). Because
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of his physical otherness John Chinaman is seen as a threat on several levels. He is
sexually ambiguous, poses a threat to the livelihood of the white working class, and
corrupts society in general with drug usage, and interracial sexual activity.
Intellectually, John Chinaman is described as an uneducated, foolish and often childlike
but inscrutable, and through his inscrutability he does everything in his power to
separate good white Christians from their hard-earned wealth by use of deception. As a
whole, however, he is not openly threatening or physically violent. John Chinaman is
instead passive and non-violent; he is not aggressive, nor does he take open action
against whites who, nevertheless, feel threatened by him.
John Chinaman is a character filled with contradictions, the most significant of which is
the way he is seen as a sexual threat by the dominant white society. Asexuality and
sexual corruption are two qualities which have been associated closely with John
Chinaman. Despite the fact that he is not seen as a proper man, but rather as a womanish
weakling, this image became associated with John Chinaman as a result of both the
Chinese assuming womens work, such as cooking and doing the laundry on the
frontiers, which no white man would voluntarily do. In addition, the Chinese population
in the United States was primarily male because the emperor of China had forbidden
Chinese women from immigrating (Metzger 632). This had an irredeemable effect on
the image of Chinese masculinity. They became deviants that existed outside the
conventional definition of masculinity. Many poems and stories deal with John
Chinaman tempting decent, chaste, white women into prostitution by addicting them to
opium.
When media images of young white women lured into opium dens
began to saturate public discourse throughout the 1870s, two
independent lines of thought - that Chinese mens labour forced
white women into brothels and that Chinese men frequented
prostitutes - converged.
(Metzger 634)
In other words John Chinaman was not only a threat to the income of the dominant
white working force but also to the virtue of their women as well. Robert G. Lee
describes the stereotype of the Chinese as sexual deviants, who were seen as an object
of forbidden desire during a time when middle class gender roles and sexual behaviour
were being codified and naturalized into a rigid heterosexual cult of domesticity (Lee
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9). Lee goes on to state that Orientals were represented in a dualistic manner. On the
one hand they were seen as endearingly childlike, and on the other as dangerously
sexual (Lee 10).
In American author and playwright Bret Hartes work the Chinese are widely featured.
They are constantly present as coolies, laundry workers and servants in his writings
dealing with the West. This section is concerned with two of his works, namely his
essay John Chinaman (1869) and his poem, which rose to overnight success Plain
Language from Truthful James (1870). The poem is also known by the name Ways
that are Dark and The Heathen Chinese or The Heathen Chinee, but to avoid any
confusion I will refer to it as Plain Language from Truthful James. The poem was
also illustrated several times and the illustrations are interesting examples of ethnic
caricature of the time. In addition to analysing Hartes poem it is important to look at
the illustrations as well, because they are good example of how powerful anti-Chinese
propaganda was in its most potent form, in pictures. Because of its huge popularity
Plain Language from Truthful James has been illustrated numerous times and has also
pirated. Therefore I have decided to narrow the discussion to the illustrations of Sol
Eytinge and Joseph Hull.
Plain Language from Truthful James is Hartes most famous work and it is what he is
remembered for. In Gary Scharnhorsts words it is one of the most popular poems ever
published (377). Although it would be simple to define both Harte and his poem as
anti-Chinese, contemporary sources and historians alike agree that this was not the case.
Bret Harte was in fact keenly aware of the ethnic tensions in California and had written
several articles, letters and essays in defence of the Chinese, for example to the
Springfield Republican, where he described the Chinese thus: As servants they are
quick-witted, patient, obedient and faithful [] (Lee 69 and Duckett 379). In addition
to this he considered the success of Plain Language from Truthful James to be cheap
and refused to perform it very often during his lectures (Scharnhorst 377 and
Scharnhorst I Do Not Write This in Anger: Bret Hartes Letters to His Sister, 1871-
93 206-207). According to Scharnhorst, Harte intended Plain Language from Truthful
James to satirize anti-Chinese prejudices pervasive in northern California among Irish
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day-laborers, with whom Chinese immigrants competed for jobs (Scharnhorst 378).
Tchen (196) and Margaret Duckett agree with this observation. Duckett goes on to
explain how Hartes pro-Chinese intentions were easily misinterpreted to suit the racist
needs of the Irish day-labourers because, as Duckett puts it, Hartes plain language was
in fact far from plain and was used to support the racist cause he had set out to criticise
(242). A good example of Hartes less than plain language is the whole first stanza of
Plain Language from Truthful James:
(Harte I, 1-6)
Already the opening of the poem sends a rather negative message of the Chinese, their
ways are dark and they use trickery and dishonesty, while the narrator, Truthful James
uses plain language. While Harte used irony to satirize both the stereotypes of the Irish
and the Chinese, his attempt at presenting the Chinese in a more positive light than the
Irish failed, possibly because of the poems indirectness.
Though critics such as Scharnhorst and Duckett have not reached a consensus on what
Plain Language From Truthful James means, they do agree that Harte intended it to
be read as an attack against the anti-Chinese attitudes that were surfacing in 1870. He
sought to present the Chinese as a viable and sober labour option to the Irish. By
juxtaposing the Chinese with another negatively treated group, the Irish, Harte sought to
promote the Chinese as a preferable option to a group that was traditionally
marginalized by Protestant Americans not only for their ethnic background as lesser
whites, but their religious background as well, Roman Catholicism. Duckett observes
that Harte often ridiculed the idea of manifest destiny by which Anglo-Saxons
attempted self-justification for mistreatment of other ethnic groups (247). This
perspective is apparent in Plain Language from Truthful James as well and supports
the pro-Chinese reading.
The Irish were widely compared both to free Blacks and the Chinese in the media
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because they performed similar labour. The Chinese and the Irish had an antagonistic
relationship and the Irish protested against being grouped with non-whites. During the
course of the 1870s in California as well as the East Coast, Chinese workers began to
replace the Irish as a new labour force, mostly because they were willing to work for
lower wages. This was not the only factor in their favour however; the Chinese were
considered preferable to the Irish, who were thought of as undisciplined and ill
tempered. The fact that the cultural and ethnic position of the Irish was unstable only
added to the antagonism they felt towards the Chinese, who seemed to gradually be
replacing them as a labour force. Therefore it is not surprising that it was Irish labour
leaders who were the most adamant supporters of the anti-Chinese movement (Lee 61).
The Chinese and the Irish were also portrayed similarly in the media. They were
represented as animal-like, the Chinese with Chimpanzee-like faces and the Irish with
Gorilla-like noses (Tchen 217), low brows and jutting jaws (Lee 68). It is especially
significant that the general population did not consider the Irish to be as white as other
Europeans (Lee 68). The general opinion of the Irish at the time when Plain Language
from Truthful James was published was more favourable to the Chinese than it was to
the Irish, who were considered to be loutish, drunken, uncontrollable and unreliable, yet
as Scharnhorst points out
(Scharnhorst 380)
Despite their unpopularity in the dominant society the Irish had one thing in their favour
which the Chinese, for all their sobriety and industriousness could never compete with:
as Lee puts it they had the status of free white persons (70). Another factor that
affected the negative interpretation of the poem was the view that the Chinese had no
interest in investing in the future of the then young country. They only wished to gather
wealth and return with it to China; because of this, they also had no desire to integrate
with the dominant culture and made the conscious choice to remain alien, which made
them even less desirable than the unpopular Irish (Lee 44). Stuart Creighton Miller
disagrees with this argument by making the observation that many Americans found it
14
preferable that the Chinese did not stay but returned to China like birds of passage
(Miller 193). Miller extends this argument that the Chinese were incapable of
integrating into American society, and sometimes they were even seen as an undesirable
addition to the American melting pot (169). They were thought to prefer creating a
miniature China in the form of Chinatowns, voluntarily ostracising themselves there
rather than integrating with either the dominant culture or society. Therefore for all of
Hartes good intentions, it is easy to see how Plain Language from Truthful James
could be used against the ethnic group it was meant to support.
Plain Language from Truthful James tells the story of two Irish card sharks, William
Nye, who is also called Bill, and Truthful James and their attempt to swindle Ah Sin, a
Chinaman, in a game of cards. The poem opens with the declaration That for ways that
are dark / And for tricks that are vain, the heathen Chinee is peculiar (Harte 3-5).
Darkness was an adjective commonly associated with China and the Chinese. Many
contemporary writers, such as missionaries, would refer to China as the Kingdom of
Darkness as often as they called it the Middle Kingdom (Miller 72). Phrases such as
sitting in darkness and dwelling in the land of the Shadow of Death were used,
though they were purposefully vague (Miller 72). One missionary went as far as to
describe them as children of darkness, condemned souls who could not muster
sufficient determination to save themselves (Miller 61). Because the phrase That for
ways that are dark, is repeated twice, in both the first and the last stanza, it is obvious
that Harte was aware of the association of Chinese with darkness and his use of the
adjective was deliberate. This phrase already sets the Chinese apart as alien and
inscrutable; his culture and religion are not only different but also dark, or even evil.
The general stereotype of Chinese culture and religion at the time was that it was
contrary and essentially non-Christian. Elaine H. Kim describes the situation as one
where these aliens to whom the English language and the culture it represents can
never really belong (93). They will always remain in the clearly defined area of the
ways that are dark.
15
constantly positioned in contrast to the Irish. Compared to him, he is meant to be a
lesser evil, a smaller danger and a better option as a labour force. Hartes readers,
however, did not see Ah Sin in this light, all they saw was the inscrutable Oriental.
Anti-Chinese activists recited the poem in public, one congressman even sending a
letter to Harte, in which he thanked him for supporting the anti-Chinese cause
(Scharnhorst 380). The poem was quoted on the floor of the US Congress in January
1871 in association with the immigration debate in a way that, according to Scharnhorst,
Harte would not have approved (386). In other words, as Said puts it, in the Orientalist
imagination the Oriental is irrational, depraved, (fallen), childlike, different (40).
Other qualities that Said mentions are backward, degenerate, uncivilized and retarded
(207). During the course of the poem Ah Sin will be revealed to be most if not all of
these things, but for the first stanza he is merely among the religiously fallen, he is a
heathen, and plainly different. In addition to being the Kingdom of Darkness,
Westerners referred to China as Satans Empire, mostly because of the stubborn
refusal of the Chinese to convert to Christianity (Miller 62). Paradoxically some
Americans believed that the Chinese were incapable of even becoming Christians or, as
Miller writes, not reliable ones anyway (134). Kim states that Asians have commonly
been depicted in American popular culture as always undeniably alien - as helpless
heathens, comical servants, loyal allies [] (89).
(Harte 7-10)
His name is a play with words, Ah Sin or a sin, which both defines him negatively
and casts him as a sinner. Truthful James directly refers to him as if he was sinful purely
on the basis of his name, as if he was an affront to God merely by existing. By naming
his Chinaman Ah Sin and calling him that heathen Chinee, Harte again subtly
addresses contemporary attitudes towards the Chinese, which this time concern religion.
Their refusal to convert to Christianity, both in China and in the United States, was
abundant proof of their inherently corrupt nature. According to Miller, one missionary
was reported as being appalled by the Chinese lacking the understanding of the concept
of sin, as well as having no word for it in their language (Miller 70). For the Chinese,
sin and crime were interchangeable concepts, but what upset Americans more was that
16
fornication, drunkenness and opium smoking were not crimes and thus not considered
sins by the Chinese. Living in sin and without God was direct proof that the Chinese
were in fact agents of Satan (Miller 69). Voluntarily remaining a heathen was a serious
offence and no heathen could be considered civilized. This essentially meant that the
Chinese were pagans, which made them undesirable immigrants to the religiously
conservative United States (Miller 73 and 169). Harte manages to introduce a wealth of
meaning into the first stanza of the poem by simply using this one name.
Ah Sin is also defined by his trickery and peculiarity, both Oriental characteristics, and
he cannot be seen as an individual that exists beyond them. Said points out that
Westerners saw Orientals first as Orientals and only secondly as men (231). Oriental
characteristics had nothing to do with reality but were more connected to the romantic
and fantastical conception of the Orient that Orientalists developed. Both Said (41)
and Tchen (105) agree that Whites had a very clearly defined idea of what Orientals, in
this case Chinese, were like. Said restricts his argument to include only Orientalists,
while Tchen includes the Victorian white general public. In the United States this
manifested itself in freak shows that displayed deformed Asians, such as Chang and
Eng, the Siamese Twins, and Chinese museums where not only Chinese objects but
living people were displayed. What defined these museums, however, was that they had
little to do with life, but rather with what Americans considered Chineseness should be
(Tchen 101 and 106). The influx of stereotypes and expectations was so great that most
people could not tell the real apart from the stereotype (129). But so far in the beginning
of the poem Ah Sin has remained passive and has merely fulfilled the assumptions of
the Whites concerning what Orientals should be.
A quality very often associated with John Chinaman is foolishness or childishness, and
Ah Sin is no different: But his smile it was pensive and childlike, (Harte 11-12). An
adult smiling like a child is commonly associated with being either stupid or mentally
retarded. Being deformed, stupid or childish were qualities that whites often associated
with the Chinese (Wu 105 and Tchen 100). Later Truthful James refers to Ah Sins
childlike smile again; But he smiled as he sat by the table, with the smile that was
childlike and bland (Harte 24-25). The Chinese are not even capable of discernible
human emotion, which strengthens the interpretation that Truthful James sees him as a
mentally retarded, childlike or degenerate person. Miller points out that Chinese were
17
believed to be almost subhuman in their lack of emotion and it was doubtful whether
they even had souls (71). Said continues this argument that according to Orientalists,
mental inferiority is inherent in all Orientals and thus they need strong westerners with
their inherent forceful qualities to lead and dominate them (36). Thus colonization is
considered to be for the good of the colonized (36). Truthful James continues to
describe Ah Sin's appearance: And quite soft was the skies; / Which it might be
inferred / That Ah Sin was likewise (Harte 14-16). Not only is Ah Sin stupid or even
retarded but he is also physically inferior, another characteristic commonly associated
with the Chinese. His physical inferiority also emasculates him in the company of
strong dominant white men, who despite their condescension towards him seem to have
no problem with playing cards with him, or rather with fleecing him for all he is worth.
The next stanza sets up the hustle of Truthful James and Bill Nye but as stated above
Hartes language is far from plain, for as Tchen puts it the tables are turned on Western
cleverness (196). Bill Nye and Truthful James both end up being conned by Ah Sin.
The fact that the two Irishmen were the ones cheating in the first place becomes
irrelevant when the assumed Orientalist ethnic hierarchy is threatened. Harte parallels
Ah Sins victory over the two Irishmen with the turmoil over the Chinese Question;
(Harte 37-42)
Just as Ah Sin bests Bill Nye and Truthful James at cards, the Chinese were beating the
Irish to jobs in California and other areas of the United States. The Chinese were willing
to work for lower wages than whites and they were taking over the labour market,
which led to widespread unemployment among white labourers (Wu 168). They were
also used as strike breakers, but were excluded from the working class and later workers
unions (Lee 9 and Isabella Black 61). Because of Nyes declaration, Plain Language
from Truthful James became widely used to promote the anti-Chinese movement. As
Tchen points out, the fact that Ah Sin is even able to best his racial superior proves that
18
the Irish are ruined by cheap Chinese labor (196). Bill Nye cannot see beyond the
ways that are dark and his declaration is fuelled by the frustration and weakness he feels
when faced with his defeat. As Duckett observes "Nye reached his conclusion only after
he realized that in his own little private enterprise he could not compete with the
Oriental" (255).
The phrase "cheap Chinese labour refers to coolieism2, which was associated with
undercutting white workers wages (Lee 50). Plain Language from Truthful James was
published in 1870, the same year that the anti-Chinese movement was at its peak.
Though Harte does not mention coolieism directly, it is a testimony to his subtlety that
with a single phrase he is able to address one of the central issues of the Chinese
Question. The overnight success and popularity made Plain Language from Truthful
James both a culture-text and a much recited propagandist text of the campaign against
Chinese immigration (Scharnhorst 382). On the surface the poem describes a card hustle
gone awry, on a deeper level it addresses the anxieties and fears of the white working
force facing an alien challenger to their position. The deeper level of Hartes poem also
has a Yellow Peril quality to it, just like the Chinese Question itself. This phrase also
defines Plain Language from Truthful James as a coolie-themed poem.
A "coolie identity" was forced on the Chinese by white society, which essentially meant
that they were considered subservient and unfree (Lee 9). Coolieism was associated
with the Chinese long before wide-scale Chinese immigration. Miller observes that
British and American abolitionists were afraid that it was a new form of slavery and by
1852 coolieism was directly linked to Chinese immigration (150). The coolie identity
was permanent for the Chinese and they were not allowed to exist outside it, just as Ah
Sin is not allowed to exist outside ways that are dark and tricks that are vain. The
Orient is represented as something essentially static, distant, exotic and self-contained,
not something that affects westerners. However the boundaries of imaginative
geography (Said 54) are breached when the boundaries that are assigned to surround a
nation are broken, and there is a sudden loss of control. More Yellow Peril undertones
emerged in the coolie issue when Americans became afraid of a massive wave of
Chinese immigration, which it was felt would overrun the United States. This fear was
2Coolieism refers to the exploitation of Asian unskilled immigrant labours who received
substandard wages.
19
ignited by a famine in 1878, which The New York World was afraid would create the
inevitable tide of an illimitable sea, of which the first billow has as yet not broken upon
our shores (Miller 189). Fear of the Asiatic hordes was so intense that Chinese
immigration and naturalization were stopped by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and
other acts in order to protect white Christian society and of course white workers, which
felt threatened by these semi-barbaric heathens.
During the next two stanzas the threatening stereotypes concerning the Chinese that are
central to the way of thinking of both Bill Nye and Truthful James become completely
unhinged, and both find themselves at a loss in the new situation. According to Said,
Orientalist stereotypes and beliefs were so deep rooted that any deviation from what
were considered the norms of Oriental behaviour was believed to be unnatural (Said
39). This is exactly the situation that Nye and Truthful James find themselves in. When
they find out that Ah Sin has bested them with tricks that are vain, they are unable to
integrate Ah Sin's behaviour into their Orientalist worldview. Orientals were known to
be wily and inscrutable, but they were not supposed to be able to best their betters, but
always be bested by their betters. He has after all changed the power structure between
the races: passive has become active; yellow has become dominant over white, which
cannot be allowed to become the norm. Truthful James remarks that And the points
that he made, / Were quite frightful to see - (Harte 37-38), when Ah Sin breaks the
racial stereotype and plays cunningly against Nye and himself. The alien has thus made
himself even more inscrutable in his ways that are dark.
Lee makes an interesting statement in pointing out the change of balance between the
Irishmen and Ah Sin. Lee writes; only when the foreign is present does it become
alien. The alien is always out of place, therefore disturbing and dangerous (Lee 3). In
Hartes poem before encountering Ah Sin, Bill Nye and Truthful James have been able
to deal with the Chinese through safe Orientalist stereotypes, but when they encounter
reality, their stereotypes are not affirmed but broken and the Chinaman becomes
dangerous. The wounded white man must take his retribution in the way he has always
taken it, by violence. The seventh stanza ends with the line "And he [Nye] went for that
heathen Chinee," (Harte VII, 42). Despite there being no direct reference to aggression
in the whole poem, violent undertones are present in the text. In the eighth stanza
Truthful James is not plain in his language about how Bill Nye "went for that heathen
20
Chinee," but violence is implied: In the scene that ensued I did not take a hand. While
Truthful James does not take part it is clearly implied that Nye, who for Harte is a
stereotype of an Irish card shark (Scharnhorst 379) and day-labourer, does violence to
Ah Sin. As Scharnhorst pointed out above, this is not how he was seen by Harte's
audience. For them, the violence Ah Sin is subjected to is deserved retribution for
rebelling against the established order of society, where whites rule and other races
follow.
Whereas Ah Sin represents the negative image of the Chinese, Bill Nye and Truthful
James represent an equally negative picture of the Irish. Lee argues that the general
stereotype of the Irish was that they behaved in an unruly manner and they were often
referred to as the wild Irish. Lee continues that they were known as a hard drinking
and fighting people (68), and this description certainly fits Bill Nye. He is a gambler
who hustles unsuspecting victims with the aid of a partner, as the fifth stanza clearly
shows:
(Harte V, 25-30)
What confirms violence is the fact that Truthful James uses the words did not take a
hand, which implies that he did not participate in some form of physical brutality
against Ah Sin. Although Truthful James does not take an active role in harming the
Heathen Chinee, he does nothing to prevent the violence either, and thus essentially
condones it. For both Nye and Truthful James violence would be a completely
acceptable form of retribution because, on the lines indicated by Said: behind the
White Man's mask of amiable leadership there is always the express willingness to use
force, to kill and be killed (227). Truthful James may be more docile than Bill Nye
when it comes to violence, but his other qualities show that he is equally wild. He is
called truthful, yet during the course of the poem he repeatedly proves himself to be
3 The left and right bower refer to the two highest ranking cards in euchre, which is the game Truthful James,
Bill Nye and Ah Sin are playing in the poem.
21
Untruthful James. He claims that his language is plain, yet he is Bill Nyes
accomplice in at least one scam.
When Bill Nye goes for Ah Sin, the truth concerning the card game is revealed to the
shock of the two Irishmen:
Bill Nye must have grabbed and shook Ah Sin for the cards to be [] strewed / Like
leaves on the strand (Harte 45-46). Through this indirect reference both Nyes violence
and Ah Sins deception are confirmed. To the added humiliation of Bill Nye and
Truthful James it turns out that Ah Sin did not best them simply by being a superior
card player, but rather a superior conman. It can be argued that the emasculation that
occurred before when Truthful James described Ah Sin as soft has now been
reversed, when the two Irishmen have lost both the card game and their dignity.
Westerners are meant to dominate and Orientals are meant to be dominated, and Ah Sin
has rebelled against this Orientalist order with his deceptive Chinese ways (Said 36).
According to Miller the general opinion of Chinese honesty amounted to they will
cheat you if they can [] (31). Where Bill Nye only hid aces and bowers up his
sleeve, Ah Sin hid 24 3xtra packs of cards (Harte IX 49-50). Ah Sin shows superior
cleverness also by being able to hustle two experienced hustlers on his own, where it
took two Irishmen to unsuccessfully hustle him.
(Harte 49-54)
4 Eucre is a card game played with a deck of 24 cards. It is the card game that introduced the Joker
as the highest card, which was higher than the bower Harte makes a pun of the basic 24 card deck
in Eucre and has Ah Sin stuff 24 extra packs of cards up his massive sleeves instead of one 24 card
deck.
5 A candle is also called a taper
22
Scharnhorst explains the ways that are dark that occur on the lines And we found on
his nails, which were taper, / What is frequent in paper - that's wax. (Harte 52-54). Ah
Sin hides cards in his long sleeves and marks them with wax (Scharnhorst 379).
Chinese clothing was considered barbaric and improper at best. Chinese long sleeved,
high collared coats were thought to look like under-shirts and were considered improper
for daily use. Another factor also contributed to why Chinese traditional clothing was
seen as offensive and alien. Many westerners thought they looked both ridiculous and
feminine, which was partly due to the perceived sexual ambiguity of the Chinese and
partly because of the pure alienness of the Chinese. By not adopting a Western mode of
dress the Chinese showed a reluctance to integrate into American society. It was a
common belief among western traders that Chinese had long sleeves, so that they could
hide stolen goods in them, or in Ah Sins case the means to steal (Miller 30). Harte even
depicts the deceptive nature of Ah Sins clothing, and by doing so he refers to a
common fear of the foreign. Ah Sin not only beat Bill Nye at his own card hustle, but
also he does so by using a culturally coded object, his shirt.
Hartes audience assigned negative qualities to Ah Sin and effectively made him the
villain of the poem; thus his triumph over Bill Nye did not threaten the established
Orientalist racial hierarchy. Hartes intention of a pro-Chinese and anti-Irish agenda was
overrun by a staunch anti-Chinese interpretation. The parallel between Nyes con and
Ah Sin's is noteworthy. Both perform their con by sticking cards up their sleeves, but
where the Irishman only has aces and bowers6 (Harte 30) the heathen Chinee outdoes
him with his "twenty-four packs" (Harte 46-47). While both perform their con similarly
Ah Sin is the cleverer of the two and he has a more sophisticated con. The significant
difference between them is that Bill Nyes dishonesty ends up being more socially
acceptable than Ah Sins. The last stanza is almost a repetition of the first but its
purpose for Truthful James is to affirm his statement of ways that are dark and tricks
that are vain:
6 Bowers are jacks of the same colour and they function as trump cards in Eucre.
23
That for ways that are dark
And for tricks that are vain,
The heathen Chinee is peculiar
Which the same I am free to maintain.
(Harte 55-60)
Whereas in the first stanza Truthful James only expresses his intention of showing the
devious nature of the Chinese, the last stanza of the poem expresses the same idea as a
fact. There is a considerable difference between Which I wish to remark, and Which
is why I remark, the opening lines of the first and last stanzas. In the final stanza
Truthful James expresses both his disappointment at his defeat and his outrage at the
deceptiveness of the Chinese. The last line seals both Truthful Jamess and through him
the general publics already negative opinion of the Chinese. Truthful James is free to
maintain his negative point of view and it is implied that this negative view can be
applied to all Chinese as a group.
The huge popularity of Plain Language from Truthful James spawned a number of
by-products, such as musical albums and illustrated books. What is noteworthy about
the illustrated books is that they directly introduce the issue that Harte only referred to
indirectly, namely violence. All the illustrated versions that were produced of Plain
Language from Truthful James go into detail on Bill Nyes attack, each more
gruesome than the next. What Harte leaves to the imagination of the reader, illustrators
wallowed in. The first of these illustrated books appeared as early as the end of 1870. It
was an unauthorized version with illustrations by Joseph Hull. Though Harte strongly
disapproved of the pirated Hull edition, he supported the Sol Eytinge edition, which
first appeared in Every Saturday on 29 of April 1872 (Scharnhorst 388). Plain
Language from Truthful James was re-illustrated and reprinted several times over the
years but the Eytinge edition of the poem remains the only authorized version ever
published (Scharnhorst 388). The reason why Harte approved Eytinges edition despite
its racist content had to do with his poor financial situation at the time of its publication
(Scharnhorst 388). During his later career Harte had a very critical and contemptuous
opinion of Plain Language from Truthful James even though he expressed it in private
(Scharnhorst 377). Though Scharnhorst argues that the Hull edition had little artistic
24
merit (381), nevertheless the impact it made on the general public was significant
because it utilized the new lithographic medium (Tchen 197). Tchen continues that
lithography was soon used to serve the purposes of both sides of the Chinese Question,
but it was ultimately the general public that chose which images they supported. The
popularity of the racist illustrated versions of Plain Language from Truthful James is
proof that the general public accepted and approved of the image of the Chinese that the
illustrations presented.
Joseph Hulls illustrations despite their crude nature create a stark contrast between the
characters. This contrast is not limited to the racial difference between the Irishmen and
Chinaman. In Figure 1, Truthful James is depicted wearing a top hat and a tailed coat.
His clothing appears worn, he has, for example, patches on his trousers, which indicates
that he is not a gentleman but is instead shabby genteel.7 He is nevertheless more
sophisticated than Bill Nye. Hulls version of Truthful James does not follow the typical
tropes that were used in depicting the Irish. He does not look apelike or animalistic in
the way that the Irish were typically depicted (Tchen 217). Although he does have a
large protruding jaw and nose, he does not look like a gorilla, and is rather thin and
elongated. Truthful Jamess shabby gentility suggests a certain degree of class
ambiguity, but Hull has clearly drawn Bill Nye as a member of the working class
(Figure 3). He wears an undershirt and pants and holds a pickaxe, which in the
Californian context of the poem identifies him as a gold miner. He is also more
unkempt than Truthful James, though like Truthful James he has a protruding jaw and
nose and does not resemble an ape or any other animal. Truthful James and Bill Nye
seem to be hybrids of both the old stereotypes associated with the Irish and the newly
emerging image of them as established members of the dominant white community.
One reason for the Irish being depicted more like men than before the rise of the anti-
Chinese movement is that they were the characters that the readers would identify with.
The hero of the piece could not be depicted in a degrading or insulting manner,
especially in a poem where a sinister Chinese deceives a white man. Another reason for
this change could have been the way in which both the image of the Irish and their
position in society was changing during the 1870s. Visual artists of the late 19th
7Shabby genteel here refers to a working class person who is trying to appear more genteel than he
really is.
25
Century United States were highly concerned with classification. Different races and
ethnic groups could thus be easily recognized in lithography simply by the features
associated with them. According to Tchen, the truth of a person or a group of people
was believed to be in their faces, head shapes and bodies (210). Facial features, such as
the shapes of eyes and noses were minutely studied, and a distinction was made
between character and type. Charles A. Knights theory of national satire supports this
because graphic satire presents stereotypes in their most conventional form (494).
Thus the way a character was drawn in lithography included a wealth of meaning for the
19th century audience that extended far beyond the short text that was usually included
with it. For the Irish to be able to break away from the traditional visual representation
is meaningful, because they were no longer seen as outsiders of the white ethnic group.
They were establishing themselves as part of the legitimate white population instead of
existing on its fringes as an ethnic group, which was not considered to be much better
than the blacks or the Chinese. Though both Truthful James and Bill Nye are drawn as
caricatures, they cannot be as much the source of ridicule as the Chinaman, because a
certain ethnic order has to be maintained. As Michael Pickering observes bigotry,
hostility and aggression are ways to rationalize social or economic inequalities (48).
While old visual stereotypes of the Irish have been altered, the stereotypes concerning
the Chinese are only reinforced. In Ah Sin the simian features often associated with the
Chinese are highlighted (Figure 2). His face has a flat apelike quality to it with a large
mouth and a squat nose. His ears are large and his eyes are small and beady. In addition
to looking like an animal he looks rather simple and foolish, as the Chinese were
commonly thought to be (Miller 148). Ah Sin is physically small in size and he looks
like a child. Like any Orientalist, Hull has drawn Ah Sin in the way he interprets the
Chinese should be, small, apelike but essentially non threatening. Ah Sins clothing and
long queue are indicators of the difference between him and the Irish, East and West
and as Pickering points out, the way difference is assigned creates the Other (49).
Qualities that are not acceptable and are seen as alien are assigned to the Other. Ah Sin
in his Chinese clothing and queue is an alien compared to even the unkempt Irishmen,
who thus become more acceptable to society than the Chinaman. Knight elaborates this
argument that national caricature, which the illustrations from Plain Language from
Truthful James, reinforce makes a distinction between ones own country from others
by exaggerating their negative qualities (492).
26
When the difference and hierarchy concerning Ah Sin has been firmly established, it is
clear that when violence occurs in Figure 4, the sympathy of the audience will not side
with the violated Chinaman but with the two Irishmen. Joseph Hull took an artists
liberty to first interpret Hartes poem in a way that highlighted the general antagonism
of the time towards the Chinese. Where Harte only alludes to violence but never
describes it explicitly, Hull displays two abundantly violent illustrations that leave no
room for alternative interpretations. Scharnhorst stresses the fact that Hulls racist
interpretation of Hartes poem is literal and has no room for any kind of irony or
ambiguity, like the poem itself (381). In Figure 4 Bill Nye kicks Ah Sin in the stomach
while holding a table, clearly intending to hit him with it next. In Figure 5 an angry mob
of scruffy and unkempt men, perhaps Irish, all being low browed, big nosed and squat
faced, attack Ah Sin beating him with bottles and one of them going as far as shooting
him with a gun. Tchen observes that it was common for American caricature to depict
the Irish as violent mobs who craved power and influence, while many racial minorities
got caught up in the tide of their greed (210). The general reception of the Hull edition
was positive and contemporaries thought Hulls illustrations describe both Hartes own
supposed and Bill Nyes outrage at the depravity of the heathen Chinee (Scharnhorst
381).
Sol Eytinges illustrations from 1871 are of a more traditional variety than Hulls.
Eytinge gives the poem the same reading as Hull does and it is of a higher artistic
quality than Hulls. Eytinge draws both the Chinaman and the Irish more or less
according to traditional racial images. In Figure 6 Eytinge presents us with his version
of Ah Sin, who is dressed in traditional Chinese clothing. Ah Sins sleeves and pant
sleeves are overly large and pyjama like. In Eytinges illustration, like Hulls, Ah Sin
looks childish, but unlike Hull, Eytinge has given him a rather coy countenance. A
common belief during the 19th century was that the Mongolian, which was the racial
type of the Chinese, represented an infantile physical type (Miller 158). Eytinge has
clearly adopted this notion in his illustration. He looks sillier and even feminine in the
way he is positioned holding his queue like a flower, while giggling. He is poised in a
flighty and girlish manner, appearing more feminine than masculine. Eytinge uses the
common racial trope of femininity and ambiguous sexuality instead of animalistic
features. Ah Sins feet are extremely small. This might just be a question of the angle
27
which is used in the illustration, but it almost looks like Eytinge is making a reference
to foot binding, a practice common in China, where womens feet were bound tightly
from a young age to prevent them from growing. This practice was seen as proof of the
barbarous nature of the Chinese. In all the subsequent illustrations where his feet are
shown, they appear abnormally small with the exception of Figure 12, where they
appear to be the same size as Truthful Jamess (Figures 8,9,10 and 11).
While Eytinges Ah Sin is not as clearly stereotypical as Hulls, his version of Bill Nye
and Truthful James more than reinforce visual stereotypes of the Irish. Both look
unkempt and thuggish, though again there is a clear distinction between Truthful James
and Bill Nye. While Hulls illustrations were unclear about what class Truthful James
belonged to, there is no such ambiguity in Eytinges version. Truthful James is clearly a
working class man, based on his clothing, hair and beard. He is also drawn next to a
liquor bottle (Figure 7) a clear reference to the Irish as a hard-drinking people. Eytinge
has also made a clear effort to depict Truthful James as more sincere than Bill Nye and
judging from his face; he looks honest. The contrast between Bill Nye and Truthful
James is even more striking when they are in the same picture (Figure 8). Where Nye is
dark, gloomy and low browed, with a protruding nose, Truthful James appears more
open, lighter in both shading and features. Bill Nye appears to reinforce the old
stereotype of the wild Irish, while Truthful James seems to represent what the Irish will
become, an integrated part of white society. The childishness of Ah Sin is stressed by
positioning him on a high crate. He sits on it much like a child would, with his feet
dangling. His face also looks more simian in this picture with his large jaw. In Figure 9,
when Ah Sin bests the two Irishmen, Eytinge exaggerates two qualities in him. He
appears both more childish and more simian at the same time. His jaw is larger and his
nose has become even smaller and squatter, while his body looks more childlike than it
did before. Ah Sin looks more primitive and degenerated than he did in Figure 6.
Eytinge has reduced him to his primary characteristics (Said 120), where he is more
easily controllable.
There is a difference between the depictions of violence in Hull and Eytinges versions
of the poem. While Scharnhorst argues that Hulls depiction is more blatant than
Eytinges, I have to disagree. Granted, there is no mob violence scene in Eytinges
version, but his interpretation of what Bill Nye does to Ah Sin appears more vicious
28
than that of Hull. Hulls version is crude, a kick in the gut and an angry mob, while
Eytinge has Bill Nye degrade Ah Sin in several different ways, which I will discuss in
detail later. Eytinges version of violence also has an underlying message and alludes to
the political situation of the time as well as directing peoples anger. It is more
malicious than Hulls version, which did not send much more than the literal anti-
Chinese message. In Eytinges version the violence happens on a personal level, while
Hull has an anonymous mob do most of the abusing.
The queue was an important signifier for the Chinese as an ethnic group; it was also
their most clearly defining feature in general. To dominant white society, however, it
was perverse and bizarre. In Figure 10, violence between Nye and Ah Sin is initiated.
First it takes an unlikely yet politically significant form. Bill Nye attacks Ah Sins
queue, which probably refers to the Queue Ordinance from 1876. This regulation meant
that whenever a man was remanded in the county jail his head was to be shaved within
an inch of his scalp (Wu 67). This was an attempt to force the Chinese to give up their
traditional hairstyles, which most Americans found offensive and ridiculous (Miller 29).
The queue was also additional proof that the Chinese did not want to assimilate into
Western culture but wished to keep their barbaric ways. The queue also served as a
visual signifier for the Chinese (Metzger 635). Metzger continues that as a racial
signifier the queue not only draws attention to Chineseness but to whiteness as well, and
what those things meant in 19th century United States. By pulling Ah Sins queue Bill
Nye effectively emasculates him, because the queue signified a free Chinese person
and, according to Scharnhorst, it also symbolises Ah Sins masculinity (381). Though
this image only conveys the threat of violence, when Bill Nye pulls Ah Sins queue and
points his fist at Ah Sins face the atmosphere is altogether more malicious than Hills
illustrations of violence. Nyes expression is full of wrath, while Truthful James looks
eager and Ah Sins face is twisted in pain.
Eytinges more realistic style introduces more shock value than Hulls cartoonish style
in figure 11, where Ah Sin is beaten by Bill Nye. Bill Nye is pummelling Ah Sin with
his fists, while Truthful James calmly looks on the scene. Although the actual violence
is not directly shown, there is no blood and we do not see Bill Nyes fists connect,
Eytinges version is altogether more realistic and brutal than Hulls. Hulls version is
caricature-like and the violence he depicts is so stylized that it does not have the same
29
effect as the violence in Eytinges version. This is because Eytinges illustrations are
more realistic and so is the violence. Though Ah Sins torso is obscured from view we
do see his anguished face when Bill Nye mercilessly manhandles him. In Figure 12 the
violent scene is already over and the Irish have subdued the obstinate racial other. Both
Bill Nye and Truthful James are sitting on Ah Sin and are emptying the 24 Eucre packs
from his long sleeves. While Nye still looks crumpled and aggressive, Truthful James
looks rather jolly. Ah Sins face is not shown.
2.4 See what the Chinaman in America really is before you condemn those who
think they have had enough of him
After the publication and overnight success of Bret Hartes Plain Language from
Truthful James many authors were influenced by Hartes poem, imitating the poems
title, style and subject matter. None of the works influenced by Hartes original retained
its ambiguity, but replaced it instead with a rigid anti-Chinese message. One author who
took this reading to heart and went as far as titling her own short story Ways That Are
Dark was Adeline Knapp, who published her story in The San Francisco Sunday Call
18 August 1895.8 Though they have the same title, this is where the similarity between
Hartes poem and Knapps short story ends. Though her story was written over nearly
three decades after the founding of the anti-Chinese movement, the racist sentiment
conveyed by it is still strong. Unlike Harte, Knapp did not have a pro-Chinese agenda or
any ambiguity in the message she conveyed through her short story. Ways That Are
Dark is a cautionary yellow peril tale of the dangers of Oriental sexuality and the
devious attempts by the Chinese to scale the racial ladder.
Knapp tells the tale of reverend Milton Grober and his rigorous yet ultimately futile
battle for both the souls of the villainous Chinese and their rights in the United States.
His pious and selfless endeavour can only end one way, in betrayal by the very people
he has sought to aid. The nave reverend sets up Sunday schools especially for the
Chinese in Bethany, where his congregation can engage in native missionary work.
While his flock perform Gods work he takes it upon himself to venture out to
California and argue the Chinese Question on behalf of the very downtrodden group
8 From here on the abbreviation SFSC will be used to refer to The San Francisco Sunday Call
30
which it concerns. The Chinese are seemingly grateful and go as far as aiding the
reverend in his journey to California. Despite the warnings of a local police chief,
Grober continues to put his faith and trust in the Chinese, who in turn cheat him, steal
all his savings and abuse his trust at every turn, even going so far as attempting to
seduce his daughter and other young women in his congregation in order to gain white
wives. The honest police chief saves the day in the end, foiling the plans of the sinister
Chinese and exposing them for what they are. He also manages to preserve the
reverends daughters virtue and reputation.
It seems her pet Chinese pupil was calling upon her at the time.
31
I understand visits of this sort are quite the correct thing in the
East we woolly Westerners arent quite so cultivated as that yet []
(SFSC 18.8.1895)
The offence according to popular belief and the media against white women was
twofold. First, they stole employment from good hard working middle class women,
forcing them to turn to prostitution in order to survive (Metzger 633, 634). Secondly,
they were accused of seducing white women with their Oriental perversions and sinful
opium. These became very popular and scandalous images in the 1870s (Metzger 634).
According to Metzger, because of these images the public opinion was that Chinese
labour thrust white women into prostitution and that Chinese men frequently visited
brothels (634). Mary Yi Ting Lui also discusses the widespread fear of white slavery
and racial mixing through prostitution. Immigrant labour became the source of a sexual
yellow peril, which was enhanced by a fear of sexual danger presented by the Chinese
(Lui 396). Knapp makes a short reference to this fear as well when she describes the
hopeless efforts of white young men competing with feminine male Orientals for the
favour of the pretty young ladies of Grobers congregation.
As for the young men of the congregation who were not spiritually
minded they urged and pleaded with the girls for a time, until at last
unable to compete with the triple alliance of opium-smelling heathenism,
fascinating silk handkerchiefs presented at frequent intervals to fair
teachers and precious jewels to be won for prospective crowns, they
retired to other churches where the girls were less fully consecrated
and had an occasional smile for non-heathen and American men.
(SFSC 18.8.1895)
Knapps description conveys the common fear of racial mixing, which results when
Oriental males are considered preferable to white young men. It also included the added
threat of inferior races being able to climb the social ladder and achieve a higher
position for themselves through marriage. Knapp touches on the fact that white society
felt Chinese sexuality threatened white female purity and even the stability of the white
family as a whole (Martha Mable Gardner 2). It was even suggested that the Oriental
obsession with pure white women went as far as kidnapping them and forcing them into
white slavery. None of these accusations were actually proven, but despite the lack of
evidence the rumour spread (Lui 402). Knapp plays on these fears in Ways that Are
Dark and seeks to direct the opinion of the reading public towards clearly anti-Chinese
32
sentiments.
Knapp portrays the Chinese in a merciless manner. All the Chinese that appear in her
short story attempt to either seduce the nave women of the congregation who teach
their Bible class or swindle the kind-hearted reverend. Knapps Chinamen are one-
dimensional caricatures. They are capable of only Pidgin English, their native language
is shrill and animalistic and even when they ponder spiritual matters their mind strays to
thoughts of the fleshpots.9 Though reverend Grober is a staunch believer in Chinese
rights even he would not use their laundry services for despite his enthusiasm, [he]
would have shrunk with true Eastern reluctance, from wearing as much as a collar that
had passed through Johns cleansing methods (SFSC 18.8.1895). Though Knapp calls
Grubers knowledge of the Chinese intimate rather than commercial, it is clear that his
sympathy towards them is more superficial than genuine. Two Chinamen are described
in further detail, but they are not fleshed out any better than the faceless masses of
Chinamen reverend Grober attempts to save. Unlike the white characters, who err on
account of navet, the Chinamen have no redeeming qualities. One of these Chinamen
is Charlie, who attends reverend Grobers congregation and who the reverend describes
as one of his most promising Sunday school boys (SFSC 18.8.1895). The other is
Charlies cousin Ah Hung, who according to the honest police chief; is one of the
biggest rascals in Chinatown. It takes two men to watch him and keep track of all the
devilry he gets up to (18.8.1895).
Both Charlie and Ah Hung are depicted as devious and conniving with a singular
purpose, the former seducing reverend Grubers daughter and making her his white
wife, the latter cashing in during the process. Charlie deceives the gullible reverend
without conscience and abuses his trust without remorse. He even goes as far as to send
the unsuspecting reverend into the open arms of Ah Hung, who in turn hustles him out
of all his money. In the end, however, the reverend and his daughter are miraculously
spared from their potentially disastrous fate by the white police chief, who sees the
sinister Chinamen for what they really are. Knapp criticises the more tolerant east coast
via the police chief, who has no love for John and his kin and often refers to them as
9 Fleshpots here refer to the grubby bars and strip clubs where watered down alcohol is served and
people can be tricked into paying for bad service and sometimes receive none at all. The fact that
John would be distracted by such thoughts only serves as further proof of his deep-seated moral
corruption that even prayer cannot correct.
33
vermin, even asking reverend Grober do you trust vermin like that in the East?
(SFSC 18.8. 1895).
The fourth common theme in John Chinaman fiction is the Gold Rush. This section will
briefly discuss the common themes of Gold Rush fiction, which consists primarily of
songs. The two sample texts used in this section are the songs. The National Miner by
John A. Stone from Puts Original California Songster published in 1854, and John
Chinaman, My Jo by J.W. Conner from his Irish Songbook. Most of the Gold Rush-
themed songs refer to the California Gold Rush. They usually convey a nostalgic and
sometimes idyllic memory of the Gold Rush itself and a sense of jealousy or bitterness
toward the Chinese. The Chinese often appear as almost a side note in Gold Rush
fiction, but their appearance marks the end of Paradise and the beginning of a bitter life.
In the 1860s, when the Gold Rush was at its height, the debate over slavery was also at
its most heated. The Chinese, Lee argues, were associated with the moral chaos of the
Gold Rush and were seen as bringers of wage slavery (9). White Americans had an
image of California as a new racially pure paradise and the Chinese did not fit this
image (Lee 9). Thus they were ostracised and eventually removed from California with
the aid of legal and social exclusion.
John A. Stone used the pseudonym Put when he wrote Puts California Songster (Lee
16). His songs depict an idealised version of a miners life in California and the arrival
of the Chinese signalled an end to this idyllic life (Lee 16). His song The National
Miner, which according to Lee was sung to the tune of the blackface minstrel song
Massas in de Cold Cold Ground (Lee 43), describes the imagined history of the
Californian Gold Rush from its fortuitous beginning to its bitter end. The opening of the
first stanza already signals the end of the imagined pastoral era of small, independent
farms, miners and producers, which was a popular image in Gold Rush-themed songs
(Lee 15). The idea of turning California into a new white utopia where non-whites did
not exist was quickly shattered when gold was discovered in California and Stone
touches upon this change in the first stanza of the National Miner.
34
When gold was first discovered,
At Colona near the mill,
All the world at first endeavoured,
To get here and they keep a coming still;
(Stone 1-4)
Outsiders began to swarm the Californian gold fields bringing with them industrialised
mining and the much-dreaded non-white migrant workers. The fourth line implies that
despite the Gold Rush being at an end, the flow of outsiders did not come to a close.
Stone depicts the Californian miner in an equally idealised manner as he does the state
itself. He paints a picture of the hardworking American miner in the California gold
fields as a victim of alien interlopers (Lee 43). One example of such victimization is
Those who had fought at Palo Alto10 / Were driven off by nations they had tanned
(Stone 1:7-8). It is implied here that Mexicans, before the Chinese, were robbing the
Americans of their deserved wealth. Stones lamentation for the unlucky fate of the
white miner continues in the second stanza, when the villainous Chinese enter the scene.
(Stone 13-16)
While the patriotic miner was doing his duty to his fledgling nation, as any good citizen
should, the goldfields were left unguarded and were soon overtaken by devious villains.
Though the identity of the villains is not revealed at first, their identity becomes clear
soon enough.
(Stone 17-20)
Stone uses the second stanza to paint the white miner as a victim of all-consuming
Chinese greed. The honest whites are compared to industrious bees in their labour, even
The Battle of Palo Alto was fought in 1846, and it was the first major battle in the Mexican
10
35
when they balance on the edge of poverty, only to have the fruits of their labour stolen
away by an infinite amount of Chinese greed. The Chinese are not given any attributes
here, they are only a shocking yellow wave that has no end. The general consensus
among the white Californians was that gold belonged to them by right and this in turn
meant that any non-whites mining for gold must in fact be stealing it from its rightful
owners. Stone supports this notion and uses the words are taking the gold we ought to
have (2:20) to voice the miners outrage at Chinese devilry. Stone also greatly
exaggerates the numbers of Chinese immigrants, doubling or even tripling the actual
population in order to make the Chinese threat seem more ominous. Lee argues that
Stone made the population of the Chinese down in the mines equal to the total
population of the state of California (43).
Although Stones song is skewed in its retelling of the Gold Rush, it does touch on one
of the controversial issues of the period, namely whether the Chinese should be allowed
to mine for gold or not. The lines And the two hundred thousand Chinese / Are taking
the gold we ought to have (Stone 19-20) refers to the bitterness white Californians felt
when Chinese immigrants saved up all their wages and returned to China with them.
The implication is that the Chinese exploited Californias resources without giving
anything back (Lee 44), and because of this behaviour the idea of Chinese mining for
gold felt even more like thievery. Eventually the resentment towards Chinese profiting
from the Gold Rush resulted in their exclusion from the gold fields via legislation,
namely the Foreign Miners Tax in 1853 (Wu 21). But even after the banishment of the
Chinese from the gold mines the resentment did not diminish. When the white
independent miner was struggling to survive in the era of industrialized mining, the
Chinese managed not only to survive, but also almost to thrive on the meagre offerings
from tailings.11
John Chinaman is at the receiving end of J.W. Conners scorn just as he was of Puts. In
John Chinaman, My Jo John and his ilk invade Californias shores like an
unstoppable tidal wave. The song reads almost as if the anonymous narrator is
chastising John for his questionable behaviour in California and is reminding him that if
he abuses the good fortune he enjoys in California he will end up being punished. The
11While the Chinese were banned from active claims, they were allowed to mine tailings, which
were claims that were considered empty and thus abandoned. (Lee 48)
36
song opens with an ominous description of the arrival of the Chinese.
(Conner 1-5)
For Conner, like Stone, the arrival of John and his kin meant the end of Paradise and
California as a completely white state. Conner conveys a feeling of almost drowning in
the wave of Chinese immigrants. The Yellow Peril tone of the stanza is quite clear,
especially in the last three lines of the first stanza, where Conner refers to Chinese
immigration as an invasion to which he cannot see an end, even fearing that the yellow
minority would inevitably become a majority. This fear was a stark contrast to the
previous attempts to preserve California as a purely white state, where other races had
no presence. The shocking wave of John and his kind shattered the utopian society
Californian whites had attempted to build.
Conner makes a reference to the confusing and often dubious role John assumed on the
frontier, as dishwasher and laundryman.
(Conner 11-15)
Although John performs an important role on the frontier, one no self-respecting white
man would voluntarily perform, his endeavours are not welcomed. Instead they awaken
confusion and mistrust concerning Johns gender identity, because he does not fit into
any clearly defined gender role. Although John has been banished from the mines
themselves, he still manages to come into conflict with the white miners. Conner
alludes to the constant conflicts between John and the local miners on lines thirteen and
fourteen. Though Conner claims that these conflicts stem from Johns folly, in reality
37
they had more to do with envy than anything else. The Chinese were not thwarted by
legislative exclusion but managed against all odds to thrive. Though banished from the
mines Johns mere presence on the frontier angers the white miners, but when his
blundering attempts at entrepreneurship result in spoiled water holes, the anger of the
whites rises to fever pitch. This anger would turn into widespread violence ten years
later during the anti-Chinese movement, but the seeds for that violence were planted in
the California goldfields.
Envy and disapproval are evident in the third stanza, where Conner describes how
Johns living standards have risen to new heights; You used to live on rice, but now
you purchase flour, plums and other things thats nice (Conner 18-20). Conner
observes how John has risen almost to the living standards of whites, if not their social
class. Although Conner began his song with Yellow Peril fear mongering he ends it on a
milder note. John is allowed to keep his good fortune and Conner does not resent him
for it, though he does state that this might not be the case for everyone; though folks
may at you rail, heres blessings on your head (Conner 26-27). Despite his seemingly
positive attitude towards Johns success, he ends his song with a warning; dont abuse
the freedom you enjoy John Chinaman, my Jo (Conner 31-32). Conner exhibits what
Said calls reflexive superiority, which here means that the relationships Orientalists
have with the Orient are so complex they never quite lose the upper hand in any
situation (7). This is what Conners warning inevitably refers to: if John breaks too
many conventions he will end up suffering for it.
In the end John Chinaman is a figure that begins as a faceless mass but ends up
becoming a stereotyped figure that stood for all that whites saw as wrong with the
Chinese. Though John Chinaman was a name used to refer to the ethnic group as a
whole, it also became a fictional character that ended up being at the receiving end of
the frustration and bigotry of the white majority. The Orientalist antagonistic attitude of
us versus them is evident in all John Chinaman fiction. Bret Harte attempted to give
John Chinaman a face and make him acceptable, but the ambiguity of his poem resulted
in an unintended anti-Chinese anthem. The faceless, unstoppable and all-consuming
wave of Yellow Peril was a common image of the Chinese during the latter part of the
19th century and it was used to great effect by John A. Stone, whose work under the
name Put generated nostalgia for the imagined California of the past and anger towards
38
John Chinaman, who brought this nostalgia to an end. Adeline Knapp and J.W. Conner
spin cautionary tales of the dangers of trusting a Chinaman and the evils they inevitably
bring with them. Of all the sample texts used Bret Hartes was the only one that
attempted to create a more positive description of John Chinaman, but in the socio-
political atmosphere of the late 19th century United States it was not possible to change
an image that the majority did not want to be changed.
2.6 I thought youd cut your queue off, John, and don a Yankee coat
The song John Chinaman was written by an anonymous author and published in the
California Songster in 1855. The song spins a tale of disappointment and regret in the
behaviour and lack of conformity of the Chinese that the Californians felt after Chinese
immigration became commonplace in the state of California. John Chinaman does not
fall into any of the three thematic categories of John Chinaman that have been defined
above. Instead it is a combination of them all. It is included in my thesis as an
expression of the attitudes and prejudices that contemporary Californians had towards
the Chinese. Of all the texts featured in my thesis it has the most direct commentary on
the attitudes toward widescale Chinese immigration in the United States at the time.
Though all the texts featuring John Chinaman in this work have a political agenda, they
all focus on only one specific aspect of the wide array of problems and conflicts
connected to the Chinese, all of them domestic. John Chinaman on the other hand
mentions, though not in great detail, many of the major political issues and prejudices
centred on the Chinese. Most of the issues that the song presents are more fiction than
fact and have more to do with Orientalist condescension than actual offences.
The song epitomises stereotypes and racist images with the purpose of proving the
sinister and treacherous nature of John Chinaman and his people. Though John
Chinaman was clearly written mainly with the concerns of the 19th century Californian
in mind, it nevertheless has undertones that deal not only with domestic and local issues
but includes international concerns as well. The merciless nature in which John
Chinamans offences are laid out for the audience to scrutinize is an example of the way
in which the Chinese were often portrayed in the popular media (Wu 107). Wu points
out that the popular press often presented them as objects of ridicule, accusation and
vulgar conjecture (107). John Chinaman is no different in its approach, doing its best
39
to reaffirm the negative attitudes that its audience already have towards the Chinese.
John Chinaman is written as an account of the ways in which John Chinaman and his
people have wronged the narrator over the course of five years since his arrival in the
United States. Although I agree overall with Lees assessment that the song deals with
the disappointment that white Californians felt about their experiences with the Chinese
and how they felt victimized by their greed (Lee 44), the song is more than this. It not
only shows the conflicts that occurred between the Chinese and white Californians, it
also shows the reactions the White Californians had to these events. Even though the
song is a satire, the emotions it conveys are not satirical or exaggerated, like the events
it describes are. The inner timeline of the song; but five short years ago, (1:2) anchors
the narrative in place and gives it a historical context. All the events and prejudices
described are those that existed or took place during those five years from 1850 to 1855.
The first two stanzas are a mixture of hope and bitter disappointment. Hope for a certain
pre-determined coexistence between white society and Chinese immigrants and
disappointment when the Chinese did not submit to the Orientalist way of life which
was appointed to them. The white narrator alone describes his experiences from an
inflexible point of view, while John Chinaman, like Ah Sin, remains silent. The Oriental
is never given a voice and thus his experiences and motives are unknown. The author
clearly feels that his point of view is irrelevant and thus does not need to be included.
The white narrator is more than capable of speaking for him and relating the events.
John himself is not given a voice in the song because he does not need one. The white
narrator is perfectly capable of running his life without consulting him for the simple
reason that as a member of the dominant white society, he does not need to. He
automatically knows what is best for the subject race (Said 34). The conflict he
experiences after all his dealings with John arises from Johns refusal to submit to his
way of life and this inevitably leads to bitter disappointment but also confusion, because
Johns refusal to follow the narrators lead is something unknown to him and is thus
threatening. John Chinaman was written five years after the beginning of widespread
Chinese immigration to the United States and is a reaction to the events that followed.
All the issues discussed in the song were ones that were politically problematic during
those five years. Though the song opens on a relatively positive manner, with the
narrators warm welcome, I welcomed you from Canton John (1:3), it is quickly
40
replaced with regret, which soon becomes the central emotion expressed in the song as
the end of the first stanza clearly illustrates; But I wish I hadnt though; (1:4).
(2:5-8)
The second stanza has a strong Orientalist quality to it. When the narrator describes his
impression of John as but then I thought you honest John (2:5), it indicates that honest
here would mean submissive and silent. According to Orientalist rationalization an
Oriental is incapable of deciding his own fate and he needs a westerners guidance to be
able to function in modern society. By useful citizen the narrator means that John
would be useful in ways that white Californians allowed him to be just like all other
minorities, who like John needed the whites to do their decision-making for them. John
like the other minorities would be appointed duties in which he could show his
usefulness and that would probably entail manual labour, which whites would usually
consider to be beneath them. John would inevitably disappoint the narrator with his
refusal to conform to a social role that contemporary Californians would force on him.
Despite the hopes and expectations of the white Californians the Chinese remained as
mysterious and inscrutable as ever, while separating themselves from the rest of the
society in their own neighbourhoods. They also stubbornly held on to their Oriental
culture and ways, which the Californians found thoroughly offensive.
John Chinaman focuses on domestic and local issues concerning the Chinese. Despite
this the third stanza has two levels of interpretation, which include international
concerns as well.
(3:9-12)
On the surface the third stanza deals with the self-imposed isolation of the Chinese and
41
their denial of the most valuable thing they had to offer the white Californians, trade.
This kind of obstinate and even rebellious behaviour is thoroughly insulting to white
Californians and their assumed social and economic dominance is threatened when a
weak minority refuses to abide by their rules. On another level the stanza deals with the
national disappointment the United States felt during its colonial bid in China. Trade
with the Qing Empire was by no means a simple and straightforward matter. There were
only a handful of coastal ports and small insignificant cities, such as Shanghai and
Guangzhou13 that were open to Western trade in the empire during the first half of the
nineteenth century. Even in the trade ports western merchants found it difficult to sell
their wares. The reason for this was that though they had the right to practise their trade
in those places few Chinese wanted to do business with them. Important cities such as
Beijing, Nanjing and Xian were completely closed off to Western merchants. The
Chinese were reluctant to give Western merchants any leeway in their domestic market,
which was something that Western Orientalist-minded colonizers had never experienced
before. The idea of an outright refusal to comply with their demands of free trade was
both alien and repulsive. For a subject race to deny something as significant as trade
was only proof of their treacherous and devious nature.
Refusal to participate in trade was not the only offence John and other immigrant
Chinese committed. A greater insult to the Orientalist sensibilities of the white
Californian narrator is the fact that the Chinese did not assimilate into western culture
and society but stubbornly held on to their own. For Orientalist white society it was
difficult to understand why a minority would refuse to assimilate, because all the
cultures where western whites ruled understood the need for it and even welcomed it
(Said 33).
(4:13-16)
13Shanghai and Guangzhou, though later very important, were not large or wealthy at the time they
were opened up as treaty ports to the West. They were also geographically situated far from the
capital city of Beijing.
42
Both clothes and hair are important cultural codifiers that can define a person or a group
of people. The narrator assumes that when John arrives in the United States he would
abandon his barbaric culture and embrace the dominant and clearly superior western
culture. A clear way of proving his assimilation into the United States would be to dress
like a westerner and forget his effeminate Chinese wardrobe. I thought youd cut your
queue off (4:13) holds considerable weight both historically and culturally. The queue
was Johns most defining physical feature, it was seen by white Americans as both
provocative and feminine. The queue influenced Johns image as a weak, feminine
sexual deviant and corrupter of western society. It was both erotic and abhorrent at the
same time. By removing his queue, John would be removing his Oriental identity and
would thus become socially more acceptable. The Chinese however refused to cut their
queues, despite the immense social pressures to do so. It was that refusal to conform, to
change for their own benefit, that disappoints the narrator and eventually leads him to
feel resentment and even betrayal.
The feeling of disappointment and even betrayal is not alleviated during the course of
43
the song, but rather gains more strength the further the narrator goes with his catalogue
of Johns continued dishonesty and disregard. John is indifferent to even the most
highly valued aspect of American society, its justice system.
(5:17-20)
Lying and cheating are qualities that were often associated with the Chinese. The
narrator is making a reference to both the prejudices associated with the Chinese as well
as the law forbidding them from testifying in a court of law. In 1854 the Chinese were
stripped of their right to testify in court, due to the fact that no non-white could testify in
court against a white person (Wu 37). At this time it was also determined that the
Chinese though not black or Indian, which were the two races specifically mentioned in
the 394th Act Concerning Civil Cases, would be categorised as Indian for the
enforcement purposes of the Act (Wu 38). The idea that a Chinaman could wield such
power over the fate of a white man was preposterous. Subject races could not be given
equal civil rights, because that would inevitably lead to the destabilization of the
Orientalist power structure. As Knight points out, it is simple to associate negative
qualities that one does not wish to see in ones own culture with another foreign nation.
In the song the narrator describes his surprise and disappointment when he finds that
John would commit perjury and thus prove himself unworthy of the right to testify in
court. Thus for the narrator it is only natural that white Californians protect themselves
from the dishonesty of John and his countrymen by forbidding them by law from giving
testimony. Further proof of Johns dishonesty comes from the statement that he not only
gives false witness, a sin in itself, but also steals.
Stealing can refer to a number of things in the song. John does not restrict himself to
stealing the usual commodities but stretches his criminality further. As in Plain
Language from Truthful James, where the Irish are ruined by cheap Chinese labour,
the narrator of John Chinaman implies the same. He steals the very livelihood of the
honest and hard working white men and even women. As Martha Mabel Gardner (4)
44
points out, Chinese immigrants blurred the lines of both the racial conventions of work
and the gender divisions associated with it. They performed both manual labour and
light domestic labour at lower wages than whites, effectively challenging their position
in the work market. While more and more whites were facing unemployment and the
uncertainty in life that that entailed, the Chinese were prospering. Bitterness and
disappointment led to talk of Chinese wage slavery, which referred to degraded work
performed by degraded Chinese workers (Gardner 1), and greedy inscrutable Chinese
stealing work from honest white folk. According to Gardner, Chinese wage slavery was
widely paralleled with more and more white women having to turn to prostitution in
order to support themselves and their families (5). Though the widespread usage of the
sexualized and sensationalized image of white women as victims of competing male
Chinese workers came in the 1870s (Gardner 1), the implications were present already
in the 1850s when the Chinese began to affect the labour market on the west coast.
Thus the narrators outrage at Johns dishonest ways referred to both his criminal
behaviour and his callous abuse of the labour market, where no white worker,
irrespective of gender was left unaffected by his otherness.
Johns otherness and alien behaviour becomes even more apparent in the sixth stanza of
the song. The narrator reveals his knowledge of the barbarous eating habits of the
Chinese and expresses his utter repulsion regarding this discovery.
(6: 21-24)
The first two lines of the sixth stanza give the impression that the narrator believes that
the Chinese eat rats and dogs, though evidence suggests that they gave up this habit
after immigrating to the United States. The rest of the stanza reveals that the narrator
has discovered that they continue to eat them even now that they live in the civilized
West. The narrators attitude towards John Chinaman is shown in the use of puppy
instead of dog, bringing with it the association of the Chinese consuming something
small, vulnerable and endearing, and making the act more perverse. Slimy pot-pies is
a significant choice of words as well. It gives the impression of something vile and
45
disgusting. The idea that the Chinese eat their fill of something slimy and vile implies
that they are wiling to eat anything without thought and do so regularly. By eating filth
they debase themselves even further. Their barbarous habits while living in China come
naturally to them; they are a lesser subject race after all and cannot help their inferior
habits. However, the shock that the narrator feels when he discovers that they did not
give up their barbarism after immigrating is a repulsive discovery and further proof of
their innately inferior nature.
The media began to commonly associate the Chinese with filth. Although according to
Tchen, the image of Chinese eating rats became widespread in the 1860s, it existed
decades earlier in childrens books and rhymes in the United States (265). The image of
Chinese eating rats can be traced as far back as the 1840s, when it was first used in
Samuel Griswold Goodrichs book The Childs Second Book of History. Tchen
concludes that it was a widely read book, which left many generations of American
school children affected by its imagery of the Chinese both selling rats and eating them
(265):
(Tchen 265)
Thcen argues that in the 1850s American school children had very defined ideas on the
eating habits of the Chinese. These same children would be adults with unchanged ideas
in the 1870s when the Chinese Question became widely discussed (265). Though used
only in childrens books at the time the image was certainly not restricted to them but
existed in commercial media in the form of trade cards, the stage and newspapers
(Tchen 265). During the anti-Chinese, late 1860s to mid 1890s movement the idea of
the Chinese as a bottomless pit of insatiable hunger was expanded into a fear
reminiscent of the Yellow Peril including the idea that they would eventually consume
the whole United States (Tchen 273-274).
In John Chinaman the weight of Johns treachery against American values becomes
heavier as the narrator describes Johns final betrayal. John has insulted the narrators
46
hospitality in every way and at every turn, turning the narrators compassion and
welcome into disappointment. But the last stanza is where disappointment finally turns
into resentment.
(7:25-28)
When the narrator says that he was deceived by John, he is referring to believing that
John came to the United States to do honest work, just like any other immigrant, but his
true nature soon becomes apparent. Johns greed is as insatiable and all-consuming as
his hunger, and the Chinese lack of identification with America is shown by the fact that
unlike other immigrants most of them did not intend to stay. They saved up their wages
and returned with them to China.
The California gold rush saw many men get rich quick and even more men lose
everything in their gold fever. The Chinese were banned by law from staking a claim.
What they were allowed to do was mine claims that had been abandoned by impatient
white miners. The discontent and envy arose when the Chinese managed to make a
profit, no matter how meagre. The narrator refers to John again as a thief, but this time
he is not stealing the livelihood of the working class, but the riches of the white society.
The lines For our gold is all youre after, John, to get it as you can, reveals the way
the narrators attitude towards the Chinese has altered during the course of the song.
They are no longer a welcome addition to the American melting pot nor are they honest,
but thieves and liars. The lines also reveal the way the narrator sees the gold rush. It is
not something neutral or abstract, but it is automatically owned. He refers to the gold as
our gold, which implies that the riches of the land belong to the whites and they
cannot be claimed by any other race. If a member of another race were to take any they
would be labelled a thief, like John and his people were.
The difference between the first two stanzas and the rest of the song is marked. The
song begins in a positive fashion, but the atmosphere quickly deflates ending in a
hostile conclusion where the narrator accuses John Chinaman of being consumed with
47
greed. The emotions the narrator goes through are ones that most white Californians
could relate to. They were offended by Chinese aloofness and their self imposed
separation. While all of the offences John was guilty of caused conflict between the
Chinese and the white Californians the most dire offense was their refusal to conform to
the western way of life. This refusal to assimilate is present in all seven stanzas in one
way or another. It is the central cause for all the disappointment and bitterness the
narrator feels. The white Californians did not know how to deal with this kind of alien
behaviour. Their Orientalist sensibilities could not cope with an Oriental that did not
behave in a manner they expected. Like Ah Sin, John Chinaman also suffers the
consequences for his deviant behaviour, although for him they are less violent, but no
less serious. John ends up being a deviant outcast with a reputation for repulsive eating
habits and a dishonest nature. The narrator in turn does not have to adjust his worldview
to include the Chinese as anything other than a subject race.
48
3. The Devil Doctor
3.1 What Fiend is This?
The turn of the century signalled an end of an era of sorts, John Chinamans time as the
ruling Chinese stereotype was coming to a close. The Boxer Uprising of 1899-1901
changed the image of China and the Chinese forever in the mind of the West. The 20th
century with its tumultuous political upheavals in the Far East would require a new
stereotype, one that was more in keeping with the new reality that white society both
American and British would have to face. A stereotype that was essentially more
believable in the new political context it would inevitably be reflected against. A
stereotype that despite all the changes that occurred in the political landscape of China
could replace John Chinaman who had quickly become outdated. The new Chinaman
needed to be something that would still remain Orientalist in nature. A Chinese figure
that would include the changing fears and insecurities of the West, instead of portraying
a more realistic Chinese character. The Boxer Uprising shook the foundations of
European supremacy in China and forced the West to face the possibility that the
Chinese were not a lethargic and harmless mass that could be managed without much
effort (Said 86). The time of passivity was coming to a close and the portrayal of the
Chinese began to include active danger. The Boxer Uprising is not the only widespread
civil conflict in China, there have been many, but one has been especially devastating
on a national scale. In fact in the mid 19th century, the Taiping uprising ravaged China;
which, according to Paul A. Cohen, was one of the most destructive civil wars to date
(14). The Taiping uprising lasted from 1850 to 1864, when it was finally suppressed. It
had an ideology that was strongly based on Christianity (Cohen 15). Although the
Taiping uprising is a significant and a well-known phenomenon in Chinese history, it is
quite obscure and constantly overshadowed by the Boxer Uprising in the West. The
Taiping Uprising is seen as more harmless and less threatening than the Boxer Uprising,
although the death toll of the Taiping Uprising is in the millions. Reasons for this are
the Boxers brutality toward foreigners, their fanaticism and their rejection of
technology, which gives them a more threatening image in the West (Cohen 15). The
Boxer Uprising began almost four decades after the Taiping Uprising had been
suppressed. In the late 1890s, finally exploding into violence in 1900. There were
several catalysts that in combination contributed to the rise of the Boxer Uprising, such
as the flood of the Yellow River in 1898 and the famine, which followed it (Diana
49
Preston 24). Continuous concessions to the Western powers, the development of
railroads and the telegraph and Western missionaries spreading Christianity all
heightened anxieties and resentment in the poorer provinces of China (Preston xvi).
In June of 1900 the Boxer Uprising erupted in earnest and a widespread spree of
violence followed that was primarily directed towards foreigners, missionaries and
Chinese Christians. The Boxers were not taken seriously at first, mostly because of their
poor rural background and the general opinion of the Chinese was that they were too
lazy and disorganized to keep the Boxer movement, or anything else going on for long.
Most Westerners assumed that the Boxer Uprising would be a short-lived and life in the
Chinese colony would return back to normal before long (Preston 47). The uprising
continued and grew momentum and the Western Powers were unprepared to defend
themselves when widespread violence and riots directed toward westerners began. At
first the Boxers targeted mostly foreign missionaries, claiming their first victim in 1899
(Preston 32), but soon they began attacking other westerners and Chinese converts as
well. According to Preston (25); violence towards missionaries was nothing new, but
what shocked the West was the systematic targeting and killing of civilians, which
escalated very quickly into a volatile situation, where white Westerners had to either
leave China or gather into the Diplomatic Quarter, or other enclaves and defend
themselves, for example in Beijing in the summer of 1900. By August 1900, 200
foreigners had died in the skirmishes around the Diplomatic Quarter (Preston xix). The
siege in Beijing lasted for 55 days and was finally broken on August 14th, when
international troops occupied the city. The British contingent of the international forces
ended the siege of the Diplomatic Quarter on the same day as the international forces
entered Beijing. The Boxer Uprising caused uproar in the Western press and the
Western Powers were shocked and surprised by the brutality of the Boxers towards
white Westerners. The crumbling Qing government supported the Boxers, because they
were seen as a tool to lessen Western influence in China. The Qing government
supported and aided the Boxers indirectly and also assimilated them into their own
army, but when it became clear during the summer of 1900 that Western troops would
suppress the rebellion, the Qing government withdrew its support and aided in the
suppression of the Uprising. By September 1900 the rebellion had been almost
completely suppressed. The Boxers, their phobic attitudes towards technology and their
hate of Christianity took the West by surprise and helped spread the slowly growing
50
idea of the Yellow Peril (Preston 367). It had become manifest and real and was no
longer paranoid speculation of Sino-Japanese conspiracies and European Powers
harnessing yellow hordes as their armies. China had become volatile and uncontrollable
within a short time. The Boxer Uprising changed Chinas image in the West and as
Preston argues (367); Boxers, indeed all Chinese, seemed the personification of
alien superstition, xenophobia and cruelty.
Although the Boxers failed to achieve their goal of driving all foreign devils out they
had initiated certain changes in China. The soon to be outdated stereotype that John
Chinaman represented had in part affected the Wests reaction and attitude towards the
Boxer Uprising. The Western powers did not consider the Boxers a serious threat,
because they thought the Chinese were too lazy and passive to keep the rebellion going
on for long. It was assumed that it would blow over and life would go back to how it
was and had always been under foreign rule. The threat the Boxers posed was
considered minimal until the violence and the loss of foreign lives altered Western
attitudes. The change that the Boxers began was not only socio-political but cultural as
well. The Chinese no longer saw white Westerners as an indomitable force and white
Westerners saw the Chinese in a new threatening light. China and Chinamen could no
longer be akin to the foolish, lazy and controllable John Chinaman for they had
transformed into something altogether more sinister. Joep Leerssen points out that this
kind of change does not mean that the old image was automatically replaced by the
new. Instead of replacing a current stereotype, which has become unsuitable, a new
stereotype also arises which is usually the very opposite of the old stereotype (278).
This is why the new Chinaman still had similar qualities as the old stereotype, but the
new qualities were more dominant. The harmless apish fool had become the villainous
devil doctor who schemed to take over the world.
The term Yellow Peril is usually attributed to Kaiser Wilhelm, who coined the phrase
(Preston xxv-xxvi). Gobineau was also obsessed with the fear of Chinese armies led by
European masters, either Russian or German conquering Europe during the last years of
his life, according to Gregory Blue, these fears of an epoch-changing Chinese
invasion, would later become what is known as the Yellow Peril (115). It was used for
the first time in the British press on 1 July 1898 in the Spectator (Michael Diamond 12)
and was used to describe the perceived Sino-Japanese danger (Diamond 12). The phrase
51
was thus used for the first time in Britain two years before the Boxer Uprising, which
popularized the term at the beginning of the 20th century. The fear of the Chinese began
to grow during the last years of the 19th century in Britain and raised widespread fear
and mistrust until around 1940. So, although Kaiser William is the official inventor of
the term the fear of the yellow wave and its consequences was brewing in Europe even
before unrest in China had ignited. According to Diamond both fictional and historical
events affected the attitudes of the public. Yellow Peril stories, novels, radio plays, and
films combined with actual historical events and became an influential amalgam
(Diamond 19). Leerssen (268), like Edward Said, points out that literature is significant
in shaping the opinions of people in regards to culture as well as national and ethnic
identity. Literature can mould and shape the consciousness of even whole nations. As
Diamond points out, the Chinese minority living in Britain during this period was
relatively small, yet their influence as an ethnic group was great (12). Diamond argues
that the miniscule Chinese population in Britain inspired more interest in the Yellow
Peril than its size should account for. John Seed corroborates that there were much less
Chinese immigrants in London than European immigrants and that the Chinese
population remained extremely small up to the 1930s (64). According to Diamond one
reason that attributed to the impact that the Yellow Peril had was the sudden political
change that occurred in China. China was at its weakest both politically and
economically and by contrast Britain was at its strongest but the Boxer Uprising
changed irreversibly how China was viewed by the world (Diamond 12).
Freelance reporter and author Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward, who used the pseudonym
Sax Rohmer may not have been the first to write novels centring on the Yellow Peril,
but he was the first to truly capitalize on it. As David Shih puts it, Rohmer gave the
Yellow Peril a convincing face (305). Rohmer was a freelance journalist who was not
really making a living in journalism, so according to his biographers Cay Van Ash and
Elizabeth Sax Rohmer (63) he turned to unconventional and occult means to devise with
a means to support himself. He asked an Ouija board advice on how he could make a
living and according to his biographers received the answer; C-H-I-N-A-M-A-N. Thus
according to Van Ash and Rohmer Dr Fu-Manchu the evil yellow genius was born and
he would torment the Western world for the next fifty years. According to Lee (114),
Fu-Manchu was the first internationally known Oriental and was the embodiment of
villainy. Fu-Manchu used the dreaded and sinister Chinatowns as his base and in
52
London this base was the menacing Limehouse. Seed observes (79) that Limehouse was
transformed into a mysterious and hidden den of sex, drugs and violence and that
Rohmer used this image to create a clearly defined but uncontrollable nest for all things
Chinese and sinister. According to Doodo Shim, tales of Chinese villains who used
Chinatowns as their headquarters became a popular genre in the 1920s first in
magazines and then films (388).
Fu-Manchu was the most memorable of these Chinese villains, popular in the 1910s
and 1920s, the devil doctor appeared for the first time in serialized form in the
magazine The Story-Teller during 1911 and 1912. Later the stories were collected in
novel form beginning in 1913 (Seshagiri 264). Because of their originally serialized
form, the three novels can seem episodic and repetitive at times. As Seshagiri puts it
(165), Rohmer constructed the episodes to include a new cast of characters that would
react to Fu-Manchus schemes, which would then be systematically foiled at the end of
every episode, only to be repeated again in the next. Rohmer had a 15-year break
between the Fu-Manchu novels and their backdrop eventually shifted from London and
Europe to the United States. This had nothing to do with the shift in international
politics, and had more to do with Rohmers own dwindling finances and his personal
move to the United States to better profit from his success over seas. Only the last Fu-
Manchu novel; Emperor Fu-Manchu (1959) is actually set in China. Although Rohmer
taps into the Yellow Peril and the fear it incited in the West, his novels are not truly
political. He does mention historical events, which were politically significant to
Britain, such as the Boxer Uprising; in fact he even gives it a fictionalized spin in The
Devil Doctor for how Pastor Dan actually started it:
However Rohmer leaves out great international political events, such as the First World
War. There is no mention of the Great War in any of the novels discussed in this work,
or the novels, which came after them. Due to this the Fu-Manchu thrillers appear to
exist nearly outside of time. Rohmers London is still the heart of the vibrant British
53
Empire, which the ravages of war have not touched. Rohmers novels do, nevertheless,
integrate the uncertainty and distrust the West felt towards the Chinese and enhance it.
This section will discuss the character of Fu-Manchu and how he became the most
iconic Chinaman during the height of the Yellow Peril in the early decades of the 20th
century. The textual material examined will contain the first three Fu-Manchu novels;
The Mystery of Dr Fu-Manchu, The Devil Doctor and The Si-Fan Mysteries. All three
novels have alternative titles in the United States, so to avoid any confusion the British
titles stated above are the ones this work will use. The following abbreviations will be
used from now on to differentiate between the three. The Mystery of Dr Fu-Manchu will
be referred to as Mystery, The Devil Doctor as Devil and The Si-Fan Mysteries as Si-
Fan. All three novels can be found in The Fu-Manchu Omnibus. The reason for
including three novels is that despite being constantly discussed in an almost obsessive
manner by the main protagonists, Fu-Manchu himself appears in person only a handful
of times in all three novels. Another reason for including the three first novels here is
that they demonstrate the atmosphere of fear and mistrust of the first two decades of the
20th century towards the Chinese. They are also a coherent whole, because after Si-Fan
Rohmer did not write more Fu-Manchu stories for over fifteen years, and while his later
Fu-Manchu stories are filled with the villainy of Fu-Manchu, the uncertainty and fear
associated with the Yellow Peril is all but gone. In addition to this Dr Petrie, the Dr.
Watson-like narrator, is not featured in a prominent role in any of them. To avoid any
confusion or inconsistency the name Fu-Manchu will be written with a hyphen as it is in
the three novels discussed here. Rohmer dropped the hyphen in his latter work featuring
the devil doctor without explanation.
Rohmer did not initially have any special interest in the Chinese. His main literary
ambitions were focussed on writing novels with occult themes (Cay Van Ash and
Elizabeth Sax Rohmer 29-3014). When Rohmer was working as a journalist in the early
years of the 20th century, however, he became fascinated with Limehouse, a
neighbourhood in London where most of its Chinese population lived in the early
decades of the 20th century. Rohmer was investigating a rumoured Chinese master
criminal when he became fascinated with the rundown neighbourhood, which is
14The biography of Sax Rohmer, was written his widow and a close friend, and provides a
subjective picture of this English novelist.
54
featured prominently in Devil. The winding streets and dark shops of Limehouse were
an inspiration and the mysterious master criminal that he never managed to locate
became the model for Fu-Manchu, Limehouse serves as a backdrop for not only his Fu-
Manchu stories but also other novels like The Yellow Claw (1915) and Dope (1919).
There has also been speculation of another role model for Fu-Manchu, namely the stage
magician Chung Ling, or rather a certain William Robinson from New York (Barnes
2006).
Rohmer created his iconic villain when the Yellow Peril fear was at its height. He
thought that the time for a Chinese villain was at hand though he was the first to admit
that he did not know the first thing about the Chinese although he did say that he knew a
little bit about Chinatown (Van Ash and Rohmer 72). Rohmers observation that the
time was right for a Chinese villain was well placed, the Yellow Peril created paranoia
and widespread distrust of the Chinese as an ethnic group. Leerssen (282) observes that
national stereotyping requires the audience to willingly suspend disbelief, and ethnic
authenticity was rarely a concern in early twentieth century British popular writing.
When Rohmer was in his late twenties, he was already establishing himself as a writer
of Oriental mysteries, but his stories had little or nothing to do with the Chinese,
instead he was writing about Egypt and the Middle East (Van Ash and Rohmer 4).
Though his interest and knowledge of the Chinese was minimal at best at that time, the
fact that he wrote about Orientals, which according to Van Ash and Rohmer (4)
meant anything east of Istanbul at that time, qualified him also to write about the
Chinese. According to Said, the idea that all Orientals were almost always nearly the
same was typical of the Orientalist mindset; non-Western cultures were represented as
having little or no individual variation (38).
The Fu-Manchu stories reached huge popularity almost immediately and propelled
Rohmer to fame and success (Van Ash and Rohmer 3). His initial success was in
Europe but it quickly spread to the United Sates and there both his and Fu-Manchus
fame would peak (Barnes 2006). Though the popularity of his novels eventually
dwindled, Rohmer wrote 13 Fu-Manchu novels over the course of almost fifty years,
beginning with The Devil Doctor (1913) and ending with Emperor Fu-Manchu (1959),
which described the insidious devil doctors attempts at world domination. The first
novels describe Fu-Manchus attempts to conquer first Britain and then the West and
55
then in Rohmers later novels, the United States. Van Ash, Rohmers biographer, claims
that during the height of his fame the sales of the Fu-Manchu stories were in the
millions (Van Ash and Rohmer authors note). Urmila Seshagiri corroborates this,
stating that the Fu-Manchu novels sold over 20 million copies during Rohmers life
(Seshagiri 163). Though over time when the most urgent fear of the Yellow Peril was
replaced by the equally urgent fear of communism, the Fu-Manchu stories managed to
retain their popularity, thanks mostly to Rohmers bestselling formula around which all
the Fu-Manchu stories were centred, Fu-Manchus attempts to conquer the Western
world and found his Yellow Empire (Seshagiri 162-163)
(Seshagiri 163)
Fu-Manchu was popular in fiction but was not restricted to this genre. Rohmers super
villain branched out into films, radio plays and comic books, which all enjoyed varying
degrees of success in different media.
Although the threat of Yellow Peril slowly subsided over the first half of the twentieth
century the Fu-Manchu stories managed to hold on to their success. Rohmer managed to
achieve this despite the political changes that were occurring in the United States, where
the Fu-Manchu thrillers retained their popularity after it had waned in Europe. Anti-
Imperialism, which had been one of Fu-Manchus strong motivators was losing its
meaning just as imperialism was losing its significance in Great Britain. Rohmer
compensated for the changes in real life politics by making Fu-Manchus political
agenda more complex and by distancing him from his original anti-Imperialistic roots.
According to James L. Hevia (235), Rohmer played on the common fears of the early
1910s and 1920s of Chinese drug lords seducing upper class women and effeminate
men into corruption and ruin.
(Hevia 235)
56
Seshagiri and Barnes disagree on the durability of Fu-Manchus popularity. Seshagiri
claims that the Fu-Manchu stories remained popular throughout Rohmers writing
career and that the franchise remained profitable until the very last book. Barnes,
however, argues that the changing political climate after the war ate away at Fu-
Manchus popularity and that the devil doctor was seen as too offensive a figure. This
eventually led to the characters as well as Rohmers fortunes decline. Barnes
continues that by 1950 Fu-Manchus time was finally over when the BBC rejected a
proposed Fu-Manchu pilot as it was thought that the Fu-Manchu subject matter was
inappropriate.
There has been some debate over the racist nature of Fu-Manchu and even the racist
intentions of his creator. According to Rohmers biographers he never intended Fu-
Manchu to be racist in nature, but rather that the devil doctor was a creation of his time
and the Yellow Peril atmosphere that existed then. According to Barnes, Rohmers
Imperialist fantasies were no different than others written at the time, such as the
Bulldog Drummond stories15 (2006). Rohmer does have his detractors though,
according to Barnes, such as Jenny Clegg and Clive Bloom, who claim Rohmer profited
off Fu-Manchu by selling hate, though, in fact Rohmer died impoverished and in
obscurity. Barnes argues that Fu-Manchu tells much more about the time he was created
and the attitudes of the people at that time than anything else.
(Barnes)
Shih agrees with this view (305) and states that Fu-Manchu is a product of his age not
so much a deliberate racist attack. Shih expands on this view by commenting on the
durability of Fu-Manchus character, which is not only iconic but also a manifestation
of the imagined divide between East and West. Diamond agrees with Barnes, arguing
that Britain was no more racist in the early 20th century than any other Western country
15Bulldog Drummond, created by Sapper, (H.C. Mc Neile) is a British private detective and
adventurer in a series of books that spanned several decades, like Rohmers Fu-Manchu
57
(6).
The devil doctor is a dramatic change from the harmless and foolish John Chinaman.
It is almost as if the stereotype shifts from one extreme to the other. John Chinaman
embodies non-threatening and almost comic qualities, whereas Fu-Manchu cuts a
menacing and sinister figure wrapped in mystery that is actively threatening. He makes
his den in the ominous Limehouse, a dangerous and exotic place (Seed 58). Whereas
John Chinaman never truly presented a real threat to the stability of White society, Fu-
Manchu threatens to conquer the West and enslave it under yellow sovereignty. Fu
Manchu reverses the hierarchy of power between East and West. Where traditionally, in
an Orientalist view, the West has controlled, governed and even contained the weak
Other (Said 48), now the Other seeks to overpower the West. Although John Chinaman
attempted to dominate the labour force and even skewed sexual and gender roles, he
58
would never be able to fundamentally change white Christian society in a permanent
way. The threat he posed was real but also passive, and thus easily thwarted and
ultimately overcome by his betters. Thus enforcing the traditional consensus that the
West had of the Orient. It was infinitely decadent and alien, but ultimately incapable of
action and in constant need of guidance that only the West could provide. It was an
extension of Western power (Said 86).
A new century with all its political and cultural changes and upheavals required a new
kind of Chinaman to be the envoy of the rising threat of the East. Thus an Oriental that
ruthlessly seeks power by using any method available to him replaces the easily
controllable and meek Oriental. Fu-Manchu was a representative of the ruling
mandarin16 class in China and unlike any Chinese figure before he had received a
Western education. John Chinaman is always a member of the lower working class. He
is an immigrant without education or understanding, and speaks broken English. The
devil doctor by contrast is referred to as the most stupendous genius that ever worked
for evil (Devil 241). The English language poses no obstacle for him and he uses it as
deftly as any other tool he wields in his impressive arsenal. He is a linguist who speaks
with almost equal facility in any of the civilized languages, and in most of the barbaric
(Mystery 14). He uses Western resources and science against their creators without a
second thought.
What made Fu-Manchu remarkable as an oriental villain was that he had no qualms
about stooping to violence and even murder to reach his ultimate goal of world
domination. No matter what the heroes believe or how desperate their situation seems,
Fu-Manchu is by no means invincible and both Nayland Smith and Dr. Petrie thwart his
attempts at world domination at every turn. His status as a terrifying master criminal is
in a way compromised by the fact that he can never win. Though the white audiences
wanted to read Yellow Peril thrillers and especially ones featuring Fu-Manchu, they did
not want to see Orientals triumph over the West. Thus Fu-Manchu is inevitably stuck in
a narrative where the nefarious machinations he engages in are inevitably fruitless and
the threat of world domination becomes impotent.
16Mandarins were bureaucrats in imperial China. They were highly educated and held high
positions in the government. They made a good living and were usually wealthy.
59
3.2. The Sinister Genius of the Yellow Movement
Fu-Manchu was one of the first supervillains in more recent popular literature. Sherlock
Holmes arch nemesis Doctor Moriarty predates Fu-Manchu, however, and Rohmers
Yellow Peril thrillers were clearly influenced by Holmes adventures in many ways, Fu-
Manchus ruthless villainy being only one aspect. Locked room mysteries also link the
two writers, both being indebted here to Poe. Shih argues (313) that the Fu-Manchu
thrillers have a two-levelled discourse that includes the detective novel and the Yellow
Peril. However, the Fu-Manchu thrillers cannot answer the usual questions in a
detective novel that is who and why, as this is self-evident, so Rohmer instead posed the
questions who else did it and how? In Rohmers novels the vital clue is usually given by
Nayland Smith, who somehow always seems to have the needed Oriental information
On which the solution depends (Shih 313). Shih comments:
Again following Doyle and Poe before him, Rohmer has Smith
explicate the designs of Fu-Manchu to an often-incredulous Petrie
and reader at the same time, thus initiating the reader into the process
of observation, deduction and most important, passing judgement.
How one is led to observe and deduce, however, proves to have no
scientific rationale at all.
(Shih 313)
(Devil 321)
Just as Sherlock Holmes has aid in the form of Dr Watson Nayland Smith has Dr Petrie;
a Watson-inspired candid narrator, who like his role model Watson is always one step
behind Smith (Barnes). Seshagiri points out (168) that Rohmer duplicates the idea of the
60
ingenious detective and his sidekick almost to the letter, and this parallel is almost
comically obvious. The two British heroes pitted against the evil Chinese doctor reflect
Orientalist attitudes in both their characterization and opposition. As Orrin E. Klapp
(57) pointed out Nayland Smith, a British official, and the criminal, traitor and rebel Fu-
Manchu fulfil all the criteria of standard hero and villain.
Fu-Manchu deviates slightly from the typical Oriental character by being civilized by
Western standards, he is educated in a Western university and wields power provided
by science. Otherwise he embodies the typical sensual, corrupt and infinitely devious
Oriental. Despite creating a new kind of Chinaman and the quintessential Chinese
villain, Rohmer still attributed many qualities to Fu-Manchu that were common in
Orientalist imagery. Smith and Petrie reflect the Victorian ideal of a Christian, honest
upstanding hero, their nemesis a terrifying combination of Western education and
Oriental inscrutability. Dr Petrie comments on his friend Smith: I was almost certain
by this time, that had he not been an Englishman; I was almost certain that some
catastrophe had befallen Smith (Si-Fan 476). The fact that Smith is English imbues
him with qualities that set him above other men. Though Fu-Manchu makes only a few
appearances in the three novels discussed in this work, Dr Petrie constantly and
Nayland Smith almost obsessively, discuss him and his scheming.
All three of Rohmers thrillers follow the same basic plot that consist of separate scenes,
adventures and a series of locked room mysteries.17 Shih also discusses the context of
the Fu-Manchu thrillers, which makes them more than just a racist caricature;
(Shih 305-306)
Masculinity, how the East and West manifest it, and how they battle each other in every
17 A locked room mystery is a sub-genre of detective fiction. It consists of a crime that happens in
circumstances that seem impossible. The crime is usually a murder. This type of mystery usually
involves a crime scene that nobody could have left or entered. Another typical quality is that the
reader is aware of all the clues and sees the mystery as a sort of puzzle, which the reader is then
encouraged to solve before the great revelation. Poes The Murders in the Rue Morgue (1841) is
an early example.
61
chapter with the West emerging as victor every time, is repeated in all three books.
They also tap into the Orientalist idea that the subject races from the Orient can be
ultimately controlled (Said 36). This is a central theme in all three Fu-Manchu thrillers
discussed here. What sets the Fu-Manchu thrillers apart from other Victorian and
Edwardian action/detective novels, such as those by rider Haggard, is that they are set in
London and not some exotic locale such as Africa or India. Arthur Conan Doyle also
did this with his Sherlock Holmes stories and there are other similarities between their
works (Shih 306). All Fu-Manchus murder victims have some sort of intimate
knowledge of China, which could help the West battle China and because of this they
must be eliminated by Fu-Manchu. Thus Rohmer turns the traditional position of power
around. Fu-Manchu seeks to erase any and all vital knowledge the British Empire has
concerning China and thus depriving it of any weapons it would have of battling the
oncoming yellow invasion. Rohmer instils Yellow Peril fear at the very beginning of
Mystery. He does this by describing a rising eastern Power (14). This is significant
because only Western colonizing nations were referred to as Powers. Another
Orientalist value that is questioned in the new century that the Fu-Manchu thrillers
depict is the idea that the West exists in, as Said calls it, a flexible positional
superiority (7). This, according to Said, means that the West can be in several different
relationships with the Orient without ever really losing the position of power (7).
In the 1920s, however, the West was gradually losing its position of power over the
Orient, or to put it in other words, was losing ground to the natives. This political
change is present in Rohmers Fu-Manchu thrillers, but he adds an additional layer of
terror, the Oriental threat is no longer restricted to only an area that is geographically
separate. Rohmer made the threat domestic; corruption is already present within. The
sinister yellow hand of Fu-Manchu is gradually seizing power and influence in the safe
haven of Britain as well as in his native China. Rohmer illustrates the metamorphosis
that London has undergone in the Fu-Manchu thrillers by describing it as an
increasingly sinister place. Seshagiri corroborates this (171) by pointing out that
London has been infiltrated by the non-white Other who is destabilizing the heart of the
British Empire. Shadows are longer at night, the streets are no longer safe and they are
populated by foreigners, even wealthy lords fill their houses with Oriental servants, as
Nayland Smith exclaims when he describes the crime scene in Sir Lionel Bartons home
Rowan House, [] there isnt an Englishman in sight [] (Mystery 77). London is
62
becoming more and more foreign and less white. Dr. Petrie describes his anxiety
towards the changing atmosphere of the British Isles; I felt as though that murderous
yellow cloud still cast its shadow upon England (Devil 228). Fu-Manchu even turns the
Thames into his vehicle of corruption as Seshagiri observes;
(Seshagiri 172)
Mystery, which opens the series, introduces the recurring cast of Denis Nayland Smith,
Dr Petrie, Inspector Weymouth, the sultry yet innocent seductress Karamaneh and the
devil doctor himself: Fu-Manchu. The evil yellow devil has come to Europe to pave the
way for the unstoppable yellow hordes, which threaten the very way of life of the white
race. What follows is a series of crimes, ranging from theft to murder, which are
executed by Fu-Manchus minions and all kinds of exotic animals and insects. The
purpose of the crimes is to hinder the servants of the British Empire from realizing what
Fu-Manchu is scheming, as well as silencing Orientalists and China-connoisseurs.
Every time Fu-Manchu or one of his minions strikes, Smith and Petrie are ready to
thwart them and they are repeatedly close to catching Fu-Manchu only to fail at the last
moment. Fu-Manchu also abducts them both on several occasions; only to either let
them go or see them narrowly escape. At the end of Mystery Fu is first presumed dead,
pray God the river has that yellow Satan(Mystery 196), only to be revealed to have
escaped his watery grave (Mystery 216). Until finally comes to a fiery end (Mystery
218-219).
Devil follows the same formula as Mystery. Fu-Manchu returns to London with his
nefarious lackeys and continues his mission as the envoy of the nefarious yellow
masses. This time, however, it is revealed that he is by no means dead (Devil 338), or
even the leader of the yellow movement, but a subordinate of a most influential and
nefarious mandarin who has travelled from China to have Fu-Manchu answer for his
mistakes. As in Mystery the plot is formed of a series of locked room mysteries, chases,
near-captures, and murders. Devil also has a scene where the thus far rational and
intellectually superior Fu-Manchu is revealed to be as superstitious and pagan as his
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simian minions (Devil 308-310). The sultry Karamaneh has been brainwashed back into
the poisonous Fu-Manchus service. It also contains a climactic scene where Fu-
Manchu is torturing Nayland Smith but is then shot in the head by Karamaneh (419)
and then again presumed dead (450) until he is revealed to have survived his grievous
head wound in The Si-Fan Mysteries.
Although Si-Fan follows the same basic plot pattern as the two previous books, it
differs slightly from them. Si-Fan still has the now familiar locked room mysteries and
repeatedly changing supporting cast as its predecessors, however it also introduces a
new villain, in the form of a secret society, the Si-Fan. Although Devil introduced the
insidious mandarin Ki-Ming the Si-Fan is a much more ancient and powerful foe than
even Fu-Manchu, because he is only one man. Shih argues (308) that Rohmer modelled
the Si-Fan after the Boxers who were themselves very much a secret society. According
to Preston (xvi) the Boxers were an ill organized obscure secret society that practised
ritualistic martial arts. Shih continues (308) that the similarities between the Si-Fan and
the Boxers went even further; for the Boxer claims to mysticism and being able to
ignore bullets made the Si-Fan appear even more formidable. Fu-Manchu has in fact
employed the secret society to further his ambitions in Europe. At the beginning of Si-
Fan Fu-Manchu is yet again thought to be dead, only to be revealed to have survived
the gunshot wound to the head he suffered at the hands of the enticing Karamaneh (Si-
Fan 515) and has the sure-handed Dr Petrie perform surgery under duress to remove the
bullet that is still lodged in his brain.
Si-Fan is also the novel where Fu-Manchus loyalties to the Chinese as an empire
change. It is revealed he used to be a member of the Si-Fan, but due to several failures
on his part in his missions to the British Empire, the Si-Fan no longer consider him an
asset and he considers them a hindrance. Where his motivation was driven by world
domination for the benefit of the ancient Chinese Empire, as he begins to be driven by
his personal megalomania instead. This is a theme that would continue through the rest
of the Fu-Manchu series almost unchanged. In Si-Fan, as well as in both its
predecessors, Fu-Manchu must perish in the end, but in Si-Fan his fate is revealed only
on the very last lines of the novel. Until then the reader is almost certain that he has
survived. Dr Petrie finds debris from Fu-Manchus escape vehicle; the ship Chanak
Kampa which has been destroyed during a violent storm at sea and Fu-Manchu has
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drowned (Si-Fan 647). As Fu-Manchus body is never found this keeps the door open
for Fu-Manchus eventual return 15 years later.
The Chinese are often described as a faceless yellow horde in the Fu-Manchu thrillers.
This was a trope that was already present in the John Chinaman era, but then it signified
the growing immigrant labour force. In the Fu-Manchu thrillers the yellow horde has a
much more malignant purpose, namely to conquer the white Western world and turn it
into a new China. In Mystery Rohmer describes a China that has radically changed from
the China that most of his readers have come to know and through Orientalism to
understand. That China no longer exists, as Nayland Smith vehemently declares; China
today is not the China of 98.18 It is a huge secret machine [] (Mystery 53). The
Orient is no longer empty as in the idea of imaginary geography,19 but has become
populated by vicious Orientals, who attempt to invade the peaceful West. The Orient is
not empty or passive; it has adopted the Wests strategy of advancement and is turning
it against Europe. The Chinese of today are not the same either, like their country they
too have morphed into a deceptive murderous people, who unlike the John Chinamen of
the past are quite capable of great harm. Petrie even points out that if the newspapers
ever related the happenings which Fu-Manchu caused: [] my account of the
Chinamans deeds will meet in many quarters, with an incredulous reception (Mystery
70). The term Yellow Peril appears on several occasions during the novels, and is
usually personified in Fu-Manchu. Rohmer has his upstanding British hero Nayland
Smith define the term itself;
(Si-Fan 464)
Rohmers white heroes battle against the inevitable yellow tide and often feel that if
they fail to stop the malignant Chinese doctor the price of their failure will be the loss of
18 This refers to China before the Boxer Rebellion. In other words, the China that was under
European influence.
19 Said introduces the idea of imaginary geography, which means that the Orient or any new area
that the West wishes to colonize is essentially empty. That all the peoples and cultures that exist
there are irrelevant because they gain meaning only through how the West views them (Said 54).
65
not only the British Empire but the whole civilized Western world. Petries desperate
musing in Si-Fan are a clear indication of this: the swamping of the white world by
Yellow hordes may well be the price of our failure (Si-Fan 560). Smith and Petrie are
only two men, but they stand in the way of Fu-Manchu and his grotesque minions.
Seshagiri also mentions the way Rohmer transforms the discourses of science,
technology and history into the stuff of racial jeopardy (172). The yellow empire that
Fu-Manchu is attempting to build is the culmination of Western anxieties and the
Yellow Peril itself.
In his novels Rohmer depicts an England that is gradually being infiltrated by Fu-
Manchus yellow agents, who attempt to execute Fu-Manchus nefarious plans from the
corrupt neighbourhood of Limehouse. During the course of the three novels London
gradually becomes more and more alien to the British heroes who inhabit it and more
familiar to the Orientals who intrude upon it. Shih (306) compares Rohmers Fu-
Manchu thrillers to Arthur Conan Doyles Sherlock Holmes adventures. Both Rohmer
and Doyle had their heroes encounter a foreign presence infiltrating London, which had
gradually become more and more hostile toward its native inhabitants (306). The fear of
the unknown, of the foreign, the Yellow Peril is the carrying theme of the Fu-Manchu
novels. Britain is not prepared for the scourge of China, and Fu-Manchu is the emissary
of that scourge.
Dr Petrie begins to see the yellow menace behind every corner and on one occasion
when he realizes that Fu-Manchu is not only capable but also willing to use torture and
other unseemly methods to get what he wants, Petrie exclaims: Oh my God! I
groaned, Can this be England? (Mystery 101). The Chinese also stoop to a practice
that is most heinous and Dr Petrie expresses repulsion but not surprise when he reads an
article that discusses the Chinese practice of infanticide, with which they rid themselves
of unwanted girl children (Mystery 71). Petrie comments: Is it any matter of wonder
that such people had produced a Fu-Manchu? (Mystery 71), Rohmers Chinese differ
radically from the passive and silly John Chinamen of the past. Only a people so corrupt
and degenerated as the Chinese could commit murder and torture. These are crimes that
do not belong in England but are brought there by an outside force (Knight 493).
Rohmer uses other references and description to emphasize how London is changing
from the pure haven of the British Empire into something foreign and sinister. It is as if
66
Fu-Manchus green eyes can see everywhere in London and are able to predict Dr
Petries and Nayland Smiths every move. Rohmer even states that the China of today is
not the same China that Petrie knows, previous to the Boxer Rebellion, this new China
is more sinister and dangerous and beyond Western understanding.
Rohmer in effect repeats Kiplings line that East is East, and West is West, and never
the twain shall meet. Thus, what is happening in London is the result of what happens
when the two do mix. Oriental corruption spreads uncontrollably into the pure and
civilized West. Rohmer also elaborates on Fu-Manchus origins and at the same time
creates a mythic and savage China to explain how it is possible that such a devilish
creature has come into being. The China and the Chinese he describes differ like night
from day from the old stereotypes of John Chinaman and China in general. While John
did have his more grotesque features, like eating rats, he was never described as having
committed genocide, or murdering babies (Mystery 71); Rohmer also uses terms like
Chinese uniform cruelty (Mystery 70). Rohmers books do feature some less
intimidating Orientals who have an almost John Chinamanesque quality to them, but
even they evoke suspicion from the main characters because their seeming passivity and
simple mindedness is only on the surface and hides behind it something more sinister
and violent.
Although the subject of constant speculation and fear, in fact Dr Petrie exhibits fear
towards him even before he has met the fiendish Devil Doctor; Fu-Manchu, whom I
had never seen, but whose name stood for horrors indefinable (Mystery 33), very little
is in fact revealed of Fu-Manchu. Throughout the three novels he remains shrouded in
mystery, which as a device only adds to his villainous mystique. Fu-Manchu is referred
to as a doctor, though it is never quite revealed what he is a doctor of. Even when
Nayland Smith and Dr Petrie discuss Fu-Manchus origins and his history the only thing
that is actually revealed to the reader is that he is some sort of third party in the current
events of China (Mystery 71). Rohmer does not reveal anything else of his past at that
time and adds very little in the two following novels. Physically he does not much
resemble the yellow race, which he is a part of, because he is physically as alien as he is
intellectually. He is attributed to having a near superhuman intellect and at times it is
even speculated whether he is human at all [] this enemy of the white race, of this
inhuman being who himself knew no mercy, of this man whose very genius was
67
inspired by the cool calculated cruelty of his race [] (Devil 412). Speculation about
an Orientals humanity is nothing new. It is in fact fairly common in Orientalist
descriptions and in this sense the Fu-Manchu thrillers are no exception. Fu-Manchus
humanity is frequently either questioned or deemed impossible, but this is not the only
manner in which the inhuman nature of Orientals exists in the Fu-Manchu thrillers.
(Mystery 98)
He evokes an equal amount of repulsion and fear from his adversaries and Nayland
Smith often confesses that he is no match for Fu-Manchus inhuman intelligence.
The eerily sinister description of the doctor in the beginning of Mystery makes his
actual appearance even more shocking to the reader as he turns out to be every bit as
devilish as Smith has described him to be. As Rohmer describes him, he is the Yellow
20 Dr Petrie reacts to Fu-Manchus death threat, revealing what he deduced Fu-Manchus condition
to be by assessing the symptoms he was exhibiting.
68
Peril incarnate in one man, and a new inscrutable threat, that is beyond any
conventional Oriental threat;
(Hevia 251)
Fu-Manchu could never achieve his goal of world domination but the popularity of the
character ensured that he could never die either. The same goes for the English heroes
who untiringly battle against him. Even though most of the chapters in the novels end
with Nayland Smith and Petrie either being in a perilous situation or in the clutches of
Fu-Manchu, they are as immortal as Fu-Manchu himself, because the heroes of
serialized fiction are as immune to death as their enemies. Seshagiri discusses (175) the
way Rohmer made killing Fu-Manchu the centre of every plot in his thrillers, but
because the Devil Doctors death would end the whole series, Rohmers plots always
went forward without it ever succeeding. Fu-Manchu makes a series of narrow escapes
during the course of all three novels and manages to survive even being shot in the
head; I saw a little red streak appear, up by the neutral coloured hair under the black
cap (Devil 419). He is presumed dead at the end of each story, only to be revealed to
be alive at the beginning of the next. In Si-Fan the revelation of his fate comes fairly
late in the novel, seemingly replacing Fu-Manchu with a new equally nefarious yellow
villain in the form of the ancient secret society of the Si-Fan. Though Fu-Manchu
cannot die, his dark skinned armies are by no means immortal and the English heroes
dispatch dozens of Oriental minions as if to compensate for never being able to destroy
the yellow fiend himself.
Sax Rohmers devil doctor is the type of villain that leaves a memorable impression on
both the reader and the characters that encounter him. Rohmer made Fu-Manchu an
archetype of villainy in behaviour and appearance. He is an archetypal figure of evil
69
who has an inherently malicious will, as Klapp puts it (58). Klapp continues that this
kind of villain is essentially a monster, who is hated and shunned and is an enemy of
society (58). His name is the first thing that makes an impression on a reader. Fu-
Manchus name makes a reference to the ruling Manchu class,21 unlike John Chinaman,
whose name is generic in every respect and deliberately so. Fu-Manchu makes an
instant impression with his individuality and uniqueness. China was no longer an
empire at the time Rohmer was writing his thrillers, yet as Hevia (251) points out Fu-
Manchu is not a new Chinaman in the sense that he would be a part of the new modern
republican China, but he is instead a relic from the imperial era, yearning for revenge
for the loss of the Chinese Empire. Although Rohmer made Fu-Manchu the
quintessential Chinese villain, he bound the Devil Doctor tightly into Victorian
stereotypes of the Chinese. Rohmer describes Fu-Manchus agenda to be to form a
global Yellow Empire (Devil 249) and in doing so to recreate the old Chinese Empire
anew (Hevia 251). Shih makes the observation that there is an interesting link between
history and Fu-Manchus name. The last emperor of China, the then three-year-old Puyi
was forced to abdicate the Qing throne only seven months before Rohmer introduced
his Fu-Manchu character to the British readership (308). Whether this was purposeful or
a coincidence is hard to say, because according to Rohmers biographers, the author
himself said on several occasions that he didnt know a thing about China. John
Chinaman is also an everyman, an uneducated coolie, a part of the yellow mass that
threatens the West, but Fu-Manchu is different. He is a leader, educated in the West, he
rises above the John Chinamen and leads them to imminent victory over the colonizers.
Fu-Manchu strikes a physical presence that all the characters that encounter him react
to. Their reaction is always the same, a mixture of revulsion and fear, as Petrie makes
clear: I cannot believe that any man could ever grow used to his presence, could ever
cease to fear him (Devil 344), and Dr Petrie feels only disgust when he has to touch
Fu-Manchu: And never have I experienced a similar sense of revulsion from any
human being (Mystery 131). Although John Chinaman could incite many negative
emotions he was never feared. He could be described in a repulsive manner, but that had
more to do with his sexual ambiguity and perceived moral corruption than anything
else. John Chinamans masculinity could not be determined by traditional Western
21Manchu is an ethnic group from Manchuria which replaced the Ming Dynasty and founded the
Qing Dynasty. They were in power from 1644 until the formation of the Republic of China in 1912
70
standards and that made him a threat if only a passive one. He was always more
ridiculous and even pathetic than repulsive, and he did not evoke the same degree of
emotional reaction that Fu-Manchu produced.
A quality that Fu-Manchu and John Chinaman share, however, is that they are both
sexual deviants. In Johns case this meant that he seduced white women into sexual
corruption that overstepped racial boundaries. John is a sexually confusing figure for
white males because he did not conform to traditional Western masculinity, but
projected an odd mixture of femininity and asexuality, which enabled him to get into
more intimate situations with white women than white men ever could. Fu-Manchus
sexual identity is more complex than Johns, who is not connected to any one sexual
orientation. There is always the implication that John corrupted virtuous white women
and thus compromised the integrity of the white race. Rohmer followed Orientalist
principles very thoroughly when he created his yellow villain. Orientalists feminised the
East and placed it in a submissive and weakened position in relation to the dominant
and strong West. Shih argues that Rohmer was an exemplary Orientalist because he
views the Orient through a lens of eroticism (310). According to Said (188), in
Orientalist writing there is a uniform association between the Orient and sex. It is an
unchanging trope in almost all Orientalist writing, and even today the Orient is
associated with fertility, sexual promise and also sexual threat. He expands this to
include limitless sensuality and sexual desire. (188). This imagery is also present in the
Fu-Manchu thrillers and even Fu-Manchu himself, because he uses the slinky
Karamaneh as his sensual weapon against Nayland Smith and Dr Petrie.
71
situations, makes him a passive villain, and represents his aggression in a way that is
not active and physical.
Fu-Manchu is not moved sexually by the sultry Karamaneh or any other woman in the
series, be she Western or Oriental. The only person he has any passion for in the novels
is Nayland Smith. Shih argues that their relationship, which is highly antagonistic and
adversarial, also has an erotic undertone. Smiths ongoing obsession with the Chinese
doctor is significant because he does not express such devotion or inverted passion
towards any other character in the novels. The one and only priority Nayland Smith has
is to capture Fu-Manchu and protect the British Empire. He has eliminated all romantic
distractions from his life in order to pursue this goal. Yet his masculinity is not called
into question, like Fu-Manchus continually is Fu-Manchu, despite his weak feminine
demeanour, however, is the only part of the Orient that Nayland Smith continually fails
to dominate and conquer, and is a continuous cause of frustration. Nevertheless Shih
observes that Nayland Smiths manhood is not questioned as long as his goal is to
conquer Fu-Manchu (311).
The very first time Fu-Manchu appears in Mystery the impression he creates is that of a
submissive, passive and effeminate Oriental, who does not live up to the massive build
up he has received in advance from both Nayland Smith and Dr Petrie;
He wore a plain yellow robe, of a hue almost identical with that of his
smooth hairless countenance. His hands were large, long and bony, he
held them knuckles upward and rested his pointed chin upon their thinness.
He had a great high brow, crowned with sparse, neutral-coloured hair.
(Mystery 42)
72
pain and that of others, cruel industrious and pragmatic. Hevias observations of Fu-
Manchus Chineseness are very similar to those of Samuel R. Brown, who discusses the
peculiarities of the Chinese. Such peculiarities include their monotonous voices and
lack of inflection, their inability to orally express themselves (177) and their stoicism
and insensitivity (176). Fu-Manchu is all of these things and even though he appears
almost set apart from the yellow masses because of his physique, education and
intellect, he is still an Oriental albeit a bizarre one. Fu-Manchu is also well educated,
sophisticated, aloof, arrogant and is sure of Chinas invincibility, despite its military
defects. He is, as Hevia points out, a perfect mandarin, who were the opposers of British
officials in China (250). He is decadent, addicted to opium, is eerily charming when he
wants to be, is effeminate, although he keeps his word of honour he is as childish and
superstitious as any other stereotyped Oriental (Hevia 251). Fu-Manchus attitude
towards his enemies, Nayland Smith and Dr Petrie, reflects his contradictory qualities.
He despises Smith in his attempts to foil the devil doctors plans, yet he has at first pity
later on respect for Dr Petrie, who he considers to be an able scientist. Mr Smith you
are an incompetent meddler I despise you! Dr Petrie you are a fool I am sorry for
you! (Mystery 98). In Devil Fu-Manchu shows an appreciation for Dr. Petrie:
(Mystery 187)
John Chinaman was a clear subordinate to the dominant white society, but Fu-Manchu
is not as easily definable. Fu-Manchus representation is more complex. He embodies
many physical qualities that are both exaggerated and distorted, in a way he is a
physical manifestation of everything that makes Orientals lesser creatures and subject
races. Another difference between John Chinaman and Fu-Manchu is that Johns
physical appearance never causes fear, whereas Fu-Manchu causes fear whenever he
appears. Dr Petries fear of Fu-Machu is so intense that he compares it to the fear one
feels towards scorpions;
73
(Devil 241)
In spite of, or because of, the high intellect written upon it,
the face of Fu-Machu was utterly more repellent than any I
have ever known, and the green eyes, eyes green as those of
a cat in the darkness, which sometimes burnt like witch lamps
and sometimes were horribly filmed like nothing human or
imaginable, might have mirrored not a soul but an emanation
of Hell, incarnate in his gaunt, high-shouldered body
(413 Devil).
Intelligence is something that separates him from the earlier stereotype. Nayland Smith
refers to Fu-Manchu on several occasions as being more intelligent than even any white
man he has known. John Chinaman has all the cunning and inscrutability of the Chinese
but he was seldom if ever described as being more intelligent than whites or in anyway
superhuman; Fu-Manchu is often described as being both. Fu-Manchus intelligence is a
malignant variety, which like his other qualities has become twisted by his Oriental
nature. Seshagiri (178-179) observes that Fu-Manchus intelligence balances on the thin
line between genius and evil insanity. He bears little or no resemblance to the yellow
race and his superhuman intellect clearly sets him apart from them even if his physique
74
alone did not.
Fu-Manchu is introduced by his nemesis Nayland Smith in a memorable and iconic way
in the beginning of Mystery, though he himself does not appear in the flesh until much
later. Smith describes him in a manner that establishes him as something new and alien,
a dangerous and frightening Chinaman;
Imagine a person, tall, lean and feline, high shouldered, with a brow
like Shakespeare and a face like Satan, a close shaved skull and long,
magnetic eye of the true cat-green. Invest him with all the cruel cunning
of an entire Eastern race, accumulated in one giant intellect, with all
the resources of science past and present, with all the resources if you
will, of a wealthy government which, however, has denied all knowledge
of his existence. Imagine that awful being, and you have a mental picture
of Dr Fu-Manchu, the yellow peril incarnate in one man.
(Mystery 15)
This famous quote appears in all the subsequent Fu-Manchu thrillers in one form or
another and is present in all three novels discussed in this thesis. Fu-Manchus
exaggerated qualities, such as his bulbous head, his long claw-like fingers, his
exceptional height for a Chinaman and his green inhuman eyes painted a figure who
was not just an Oriental but a villain to his very core, an outsider and an enemy. Fu-
Manchu is described differently from most Chinamen in Rohmers novels and
discounting a few exceptions, such as mandarin Ki-Ming, they are as stereotypical and
generic as in any other Orientalist text. They are squat, flat-faced and animalistic, are
incapable of proper speech, and can only handle simplistic pidgin. Rohmer often
describes Asian languages as guttural and strange, which gives an animalistic
impression as well: No shavee no shavee, he [the Chinaman] chattered in simian
fashion (Mystery 37). Fu-Manchu himself speaks in a sibilant hiss, even when he
speaks civilized western languages (Devil 306). The Chinese are also superstitious,
uncivilized and inscrutable, even animalistic and childlike. The only thing that makes
them slightly different from classic Orientalist descriptions is that they are murderous
and violent, a quality that was not typical in fictional Chinamen before the Boxer
Rebellion. The Orient has never been a threat before, except in moral corruption.
Rohmers yellow villain and his murderous minions threaten the West in traditional
ways, but he has added the capability of violence into the mix violence without
remorse. The Yellow Peril, which Rohmer describes as incarnate in Fu-Manchu
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(Mystery 15) has become a physical threat to any white person it touches.
Fu-Manchu is set apart from other Orientals on account of his near superhuman intellect
and his physical alienness and his Western education. However, he is not spared from
traditional Orientalist tropes and can never escape being a member of the subject races,
no matter how invincible or superior he seems. One feature that he has in common with
John Chinaman is his penchant for gambling, a quality that is represented as both
degenerate and negative. In Si-Fan Fu-Manchu refers to the innate gambling habit of all
Chinese and which he cannot avoid or deny. He has a card decide his fate: shall we
then determine your immediate future upon the turning of a card, as the gamester within
me, within every one of my race, suggests? (Si-Fan 530). There is here an interesting
connection to the conflict between Sam Nye and Ah Sin. According to Van Ash and
Rohmer (19), Rohmer read Hartes writing, and Fu-Manchus declaration thus draws a
direct link between the old Chinese stereotype and the new. However, Fu-Manchu
never succeeds in his schemes, despite Dr Petries paranoia about his omnipresence;
Fu-Manchu is omnipresent: his tentacles embrace everything (Mystery 75). His
British adversaries always rise as the victors at the end of every book. Fu-Manchu,
despite his Western education, sometimes degenerates to the level of an animal: By
slow degrees, and with a reptilian agility horrible to watch Fu-Manchu was neutralizing
the advantage gained by Weymouth (194 Mystery). Rohmer also at times directly
compares him to an animal: Dr Fu-Manchu, his top lip drawn up above his teeth in the
manner of an angry jackal (Devil 310). Fu-Manchu is also as childish and superstitious
as any other stereotypical Oriental.
(Devil 312)
This superstitiousness almost costs him his position within the Si-Fan and also allows
Dr Petrie to blackmail him with a white peacock, which is the symbol of the
organization (Devil 312-313). Thus an Englishman, who is by no means his mental
superior but is not held back by archaic beliefs, outsmarts the yellow mastermind. It
76
could be argued that despite Fu-Manchu being a new breed of Chinaman, the new breed
can never really rid itself of the old.
Rohmer made Fu-Manchu even more clearly into a supervillain by having him conduct
all kinds of mysterious experiments:
(Mystery 99)
Although most of his inventions and experiments turn out to be exotic animals and
plants, sophisticated germ warfare is also implied, the very height of science that the
West cannot hope to compete with. As Nayland Smith remarks; Fu-Manchu employs
weapons of both the future and of the past (Si-Fan 637). What all these outlandish
things have in common is that they are almost completely unknown to the West. They
are shrouded in mystery and mystique, even the more modern and futuristic devices.
Petrie remarks in Mystery that Cannabis Indica is a treacherous narcotic, as every
medical man knows full well; but Fu-Manchus knowledge of the drug was far in
22 A wire jacket is a type of torture device. The victim is dressed in a jacket made of iron wires. The
wires were connected to wheels on either side and they were slowly tightened around the victims
torso until they cut into the victims flesh.
77
advance of our own slow science (156). His scientific advances and experiments also
serve as a source of fear and intimidation. They are revealed to be as inscrutable as the
doctor himself and distinctly Oriental:
(Mystery 94)
Fu-Manchu does not seem to actually invent anything himself but rather collects a
menagerie of freaks and exotics, which he then uses cleverly against his enemies. The
Zayats Kiss and the Call of Siva, for example, have near mythical reputations for their
association with murder and carnage but turn out to involve rather mundane insects and
fakirs with choking wires, which Fu-Manchu uses as his vehicles of murder. Any actual
inventions that he uses are those that he steals from his white enemies and uses them
against their creators, such as an American scientists rocket plans. Somehow Nayland
Smith always seems to recognize all the fantastical creations and exotic weapons that
Fu-Manchu uses to murder British Orientalists and China connoisseurs. Thanks to his
convenient knowledge he and Dr Petrie are always able to thwart Fu-Manchus devilish
plans; even though he might manage to murder or abduct someone, his final agenda
never succeeds. According to Rohmers biographers, Rohmer paid great attention to
factual accuracy;
According to their self-admitted bias it is unclear whether this is actually the case but
this is the image that his biographers wished to convey of Rohmers methods.
Fu-Manchu proves his craven nature and deceptiveness by almost never facing his
enemies himself, but always keeping a minion or two between himself and his
adversaries. Fu-Manchu does not use Oriental murderers and fanatics to do his dirty
78
deeds, but instead uses his repulsive poisonous creatures as murder weapons;
(Mystery 101)
Fu-Manchus perversion does not end in his fascination with repulsive creepy crawlies.
He is similar to John Chinaman in one thing, he also seduces white people into
corruption, though his manner of seduction is not the same as Johns. Rather than using
sex, Fu-Manchu seduces his victims with the promise of power or he blackmails them.
Abel Slattin is a white private investigator whom Nayland Smith despises. Smith even
says that he has a rotten reputation and is not much better than a blackmailer (Devil
268). Petrie is revolted and incredulous as he realizes that Slattin has become a minion
of Fu-Manchu: you think he may have sunk so low as to become a creature of Fu-
Manchu? I asked aghast. (Devil 269). As it turns out Fu-Manchu has bribed this
morally corrupted ex-policeman into his service and he has no problem being
subservient to an Oriental as long as the price is right. It is further proof of his
irredeemable Oriental devilishness, which seeks to corrupt as well as conquer. As a
villain Fu-Manchu is devious, conniving and dangerous, but he is never himself a
physical threat. He uses proxies, in the form of his Oriental minions, science or exotic
animals to perform most of his evil deeds. Rohmer does have one scene at the end of
Mystery where Fu-Manchu struggles with an English policeman, but usually he does not
endanger himself. John Chinaman never posed an actual physical threat to the White
majority either. Neither he nor Fu-Manchu are in any way physically openly violent,
unlike Nayland Smith and Dr. Petrie who deal with all the problems they face
themselves head on and physically. Fu-Manchu uses his superior mind to reach his
goals instead of physical prowess.
3.4. No Man Was Better Equipped than this Gaunt British Commissioner
Fu-Manchus nemesis and the hero of the thrillers, Denis Nayland Smith is the complete
opposite of Fu-Manchu in every possible way. He represents the post-Victorian hero
79
and masculine ideal. Smith is a prime example of Klapps definition of heroism (57).
He has qualities such as devotion, courage and prowess and he acts, as Klapp puts it,
beyond the call of duty (57). Rohmer depicts Smith very clearly as a hero and his
singular devotion to the British Empire as well as the destruction of Fu-Manchu is
evident and central (Klapp 57). Heroes symbolize success, perfection and the conquest
of evil; and the evil Smith conquers time and time again is Fu-Manchu and the yellow
movement (57). He protects Europe and the white race from the menace of the yellow
hordes, having a secret knowledge and understanding of the Orient that gives him an
edge against the sinister yellow doctor and his Oriental hordes (Lee 115). Lee describes
Smith as an Orientalist, a general area studies expert, who has an
(Lee 116)
The narrator, Smiths sidekick Dr. James Petrie, although equally British, cannot
measure up to Smiths level of masculinity Smith is tanned due to working outdoors in
Burma and demonstrates his masculinity to Petrie almost as soon as he appears in the
beginning of Mystery as he brandishes a scar on his forearm which he got in a knife
fight in the line of duty (Mystery 2). Shih argues that when compared to Smith, the
masculinity of Dr. Petries profession is called into question. Petrie works primarily
with his mind, whilst Smith works with his body, something which is more
straightforward and clearly more openly masculine. Shih argues that Rohmer feminizes
Dr. Petrie when he compares his subdued indoor profession to Smiths dangerous and at
times violent activities (307). Shih also sees Smith as an unambiguous representative of
the state (307), in his role as a colonial commissioner.
Smith represents Orientalist colonial ideals as he is the state in action. The colonies
need men like him to function properly and he believes in his work and in the colonial
ideology of dominating the subject races, who need to be governed. According to
Orientalist doctrine the subject races understand the need for governance and they also
welcome it, because they are incapable of governing themselves and require the white
80
race to do it for them (Said 33, 34). Smith represents the Orientalist belief that the
Orient must be saved from its own barbarism (Said 86). The only way to do this is to
colonize it. In Smith Rohmer has created the perfect Edwardian hero, the ideal
colonizer, who is the only one who can stand against Dr. Fu-Manchu and have any hope
of prevailing. He is in peak physical condition, faces all obstacles head on and tackles
them like a straight-edged Westerner would, with his revolver in hand. Nayland Smith
and Fu-Manchu are even paralleled, like East and West;
It was a breath of the East that stretched out a yellow hand to the
West. It was symbolic of the subtle intangible power manifested in
Dr Fu-Manchu, as Nayland Smith lean, agile, bronzed with the
suns of Burma was symbolic of the clean British efficiency
which sought to combat the insidious enemy.
(Mystery 80)
Said describes a similar comparison in Orientalist thought. Nayland Smith is the perfect
representative of Orientalist philosophy concerning the strength of the West and the
weakness of the East, as seen by the West. Rohmer incorporated classic qualities of the
superior white man into Smith. These qualities are, according to Gobineau; a natural
energy, intelligence, physical capability, perseverance, an instinct for order and a sense
of liberty (Blue 101). According to Said (45), such strength and weakness are natural to
Orientalism just like they are to anything that divides the world into large general
divisions, entities that coexist in a state of tension produced by what is believed to be
racial difference. Shih points out (308) that Smith persecutes the Chinese, whether they
are Fu-Manchus minions or not. In an interesting parallel to the Boxer rebellion of
1900 and the reversal of roles, London was now under attack and Smith with Petrie by
his side is its defender.
Rohmer imbues Smith with a highly developed sense of honour. Fu-Manchu, at times
exhibits a type of Oriental honour, because he does keep his end of the bargain with Dr.
Petrie, but he remains a true Oriental treachery and inscrutability. Smiths unwavering
honour provides a stark contrast and is clear proof of the superiority of the white race,
of which he is a paragon:
81
Thus on more than one occasion, he allows Fu-Manchu or one of his underlings
to escape out of an ingrained sense of obligation or duty.
(Shih 309)
Sometimes Smith is even given the chance to kill Fu-Manchu and in this way end the
yellow threat permanently. Yet he refuses to do so, because he has given his word. I
curse myself for an honourable fool, he said. No one could dispute my right to shoot
you where you stand (Mystery 131).
With the Watson-like Petrie, terror of Fu-Manchu leaves him almost a weakling. Shih
argues (307) that during his association with Nayland Smith, Dr Petrie matures into a
fully masculine British Edwardian male, but is never quite equal with Nayland Smith in
this regard. He does get over his initial crippling terror of Fu-Manchu, but retains an
ongoing creeping fear of him that he never quite manages to shake. He and Fu-Manchu
manage to form a sort of relationship over the course of the three novels and Fu-
Manchu even comes to respect Dr Petrie, says in Devil: Dr. Petrie, he said softly, I
shall always listen to you with respect (312). Fu-Manchu respects Petrie to the extent
that he begins to believe that Petrie is some sort of scientific genius and Fu-Manchu
wants to take him with him back to China (Devil 349). He also wants Dr Petrie to be
present and assist when Fu-Manchu has the most prominent brain surgeon in Britain, Sir
Baldwin Frazer kidnapped and brought into his lair to remove the bullet lodged in his
brain (Si-Fan 530-531). He wants Dr. Petrie to assist in the surgery (Si-Fan 528),
because he has respect for him in his own twisted and disturbed way, threatening to
harm Karamaneh if Dr Petrie does not help.
Dr. Petrie is perhaps the only person to whom the yellow devil actually keeps his
promises. Although Dr. Petrie can never reach the peak of masculinity that Nayland
Smith represents, it is Petrie who provides the romantic interest in the novel with the
enticing Karamaneh, the ideal submissive and mysterious Oriental woman who is at the
same time both incomprehensible to a Western man and sexually desirable. She is
attracted to him from the very beginning of Mystery, whereas Nayland Smith has no
time for such distractions as women, even calling them a two-edged sword in Mystery
(13). For Smith the Empire and protecting it from the yellow threat takes precedence
over everything. Shih points out that there are only a few occasions when Smith and
82
Petrie come into conflict and all of them have to do with Petrie putting Karamaneh
before their common goal, that is to thwart Fu-Manchu (Shih 309). Smith even
expresses his distaste for Petries weakness for Karamaneh in Devil:
You know that she is utterly false, yet a glance or two from those dark
eyes of her can make a fool of you! A woman made a fool of me once,
but I learned my lesson; you have failed to learn yours. If you are determined
to go to pieces on the rock that broke up Adam do so! But dont involve me in
the wreck, Petrie, for that might mean a yellow emperor of the world, and you
know it!
(Devil 260-261)
Rohmer intended Petries love interests to satisfy readers need for romance, whereas
Smiths complete lack of romantic connections is in line with the rationalist model
masculinityprovided by Doyles Sherlock Holmes and Poes Dupin
(Said 207)
83
Karamaneh is all of these things and Rohmer has her at times throw herself at Petrie and
at others, behaving as Fu-Manchus most devious weapon, and utilizing her sexuality to
do so. Petrie is spellbound by her Oriental exoticism, though he never forgets that she is
beneath him due to her race.
Sax Rohmers Fu-Manchu became a new Chinaman for a new century and ended up not
only replacing John Chinaman as the typical Chinese stereotype, but also becoming the
most famous Chinese villain. He is the result of a shift from harmless fool to a sinister
villain. The reason for the transformation of the public image of the Chinese lies in the
Boxer rebellion and the political consequences it had both domestically in China and
internationally. The violence, brutality and hatred the Chinese directed towards was
unheard of and it strengthened the spreading ideas and fears of the Yellow Peril. Fu-
Manchu is a product of the Yellow Peril as much as he is of the new century. Even
though Fu-Manchu represented a new image of the Chinese, he was not separate of the
old Orientalist stereotype, Fu-Manchu could never best his British adversaries, nor
could he succeed in his plan to conquer the world. Fu-Manchu was a real threat to the
sovereignty and freedom of the white race, but he could never win. Fu-Manchu, like
John Chinaman submits to Orientalist rules of superiority and submissivity. Fu-Manchu
provided a sense of thrill and fear for audiences of the Yellow Peril Era, but it is a safe
thrill, because it will never be realized. John Chinaman evolved and changed due to
political events and race paranoia and the result is Fu-Manchu.
4. But a Piece of Good Advice, John Ill Give You, Ere I Go - Conclusion
John Chinaman and Fu-Manchu are two halves of the same stereotype. John Chinaman
embodies the fears, disappointments and expectations of 19th century readers and Fu-
Manchu continues this in the early 20th century but in a more active fashion, providing
both thrills and entertainment for the white West and a Yellow Peril-fuelled villain to
direct discontent and fear toward. My thesis has sought to show how John Chinaman
84
was used as a propaganda vehicle to affect domestic politics, such as Chinese
immigration and labour issues, in the United States west coast. In addition to this, as I
have shown in the section dealing with John Chinaman, songs and poems that featured
the character were used to affect public opinion regarding United States colonial
interests in China as well as domestic issues, such as widespread Chinese immigration
and coolieism. Fu-Manchu emerged at the beginning of the 20th century as a reaction to
political upheavals in China and the changing attitudes and prejudices towards the
Chinese. The Devil Doctor is previously unseen Chinese stereotype; an intelligent,
active and violent villain with megalomaniac ambitions. Fu-Manchu was not used for
political purposes in the same manner as John Chinaman was, but the Fu-Manchu
thrillers were a means to deal with the changing world and reinforce the traditional
Orientalist world order in a time when fear of counter colonialism and the Yellow Peril
began to rise in the West. Where John Chinaman is a strongly Orientalist character in
his passive and asexual submissivity, Fu-Manchu is less so. As my analysis of Fu-
Manchus character has shown, this does not mean that Fu-Manchu is not an Orienalist
character. He is, however, a more subtle creation than John Chinaman and serves a
different poitical purpose than his predecessor.
My thesis shows that Chinese stereotypes have served a specific purpose in popular
fiction which goes beyond entertainment. John Chinaman performed a dual role of
entertainment and propaganda, gaining huge popularity as the figurehead and symbol
for the anti-Chinese Movement. John Chinaman was a term used for the Chinese as an
ethnic group, but as I have argued in my thesis it also became the name of a stock
Chinese caricature, which gained widespread popularity in the late 19th century in the
United States and Britain. John Chinaman is a primarily negative character, and is not
meant to be a positive characterization of the Chinese as an ethnic group. Even when
attempts were made to present the Chinese in a more positive light, it very rarely
succeeded. Once even leading to the opposite effect as in the case of Bret Hartes Plain
Language from Truthful James. There is much popular fiction featuring Chinese
characters that are not called John Chinaman, such as Ah Sin from Plain Language
from Truthful James and Ah Hung from Adeline Knapps Ways that Are Dark,
nevertheless they still embody the same stereotype and character concept. I have shown
through close readings and through analysis of popular songs, poems and short stories
how John Chinaman fiction both influenced current affairs and reflected the general
85
atmosphere and discontent of the time.
I divided the fiction featuring John Chinaman into three different groups: the Gold Rush
theme, the cheap labour theme and the seducer / moral corrupter theme. I have provided
textual examples of all three themes and how they represented the political and social
attitudes towards the Chinese at the time. The fiction featuring John Chinaman also
serves as a means to define the characteristics of John Chinaman the character, which
mirror the prejudices the white majority felt towards the Chinese minority. I have also
provided examples of John Chinaman as a means of propaganda, such as Bret Hartes
Plain Language from Truthful James and the anonymously authored John
Chinaman. John Chinaman, no matter what incarnation he took, is a strongly
Orientalist character, who despite posing economic and sexual threats towards the white
majority, was never taken seriously but rather thought of as a nuisance and an
embarrassing miscreant. He remained passive and inferior, while the white majority
remained superior in comparison. John Chinaman posed threats to the dominant white
society and while they caused anxiety, none of them was truly threatening. John
Chinaman is a character that in the end, could always be controlled, either by a superior
white individual, as in the case of Ah Sin and Bill Nye, although Bill Nyes superiority
beyond his race is debatable. Society, in the form of the police came to Reverend
Grobers aid and spared him from the shame of a daughter trapped in an interracial
marriage. Legislation battled John Chinamans greed in the mining industry and
thwarted his attempts to become rich. John Chinaman was the only text used in my
thesis, where there was no clear retribution for John Chinamans attempted abuses,
although his treacherous nature is known to the narrator. John Chinaman, despite all his
troublemaking, could always be subdued by either a white individual, or white society
as a whole. John Chinaman is an essentially Orientalist and controllable character and
represented 19th century prejudices towards the Chinese, who were essentially seen as
passive, inferior and asexual.
My thesis has sought to determine how John Chinaman became an obsolete and
outdated character and where the need for a new, different Chinese stereotype arose. I
have presented the historical events that led to the change in perception and image of
the Chinese as an ethnic group and in fiction. The Boxer Uprising changed the way the
Western world saw China and the Chinese. This also meant that John Chinaman the
86
controllable, safe stereotype was no longer found satisfactory. The Boxer Uprising
caught the West by surprise and nobody was prepared for the widespread violence that
was directed towards Western whites in China. Even though the conflict itself was short
lived, the way the Chinese people banded together to drive Western influence out of
China caught Western colonialists by surprise. The notion of the Yellow Peril brought
about a heightened fear and mistrust towards the Chinese, which the events and
violence of the Boxer Uprising only enhanced. The Chinese were seen as a threat to the
West and even the Western way of life. There was even anxiety over a possible counter
colonialism, where faceless yellow hordes would flow uncontrollably into Europe. The
way the West saw China was permanently shaken up and this meant that old stereotypes
needed reinventing. The early 20th century brought with it a slew of new different
Chinese characters, primarily introducing the Chinese villain, the most famous and
iconic of these villains being Sax Rohmers Fu-Manchu. In the Fu-Manchu section I
have shown how John Chinaman gave way to Fu-Manchu and why this change
occurred.
The section dealing with Fu-Manchu analyzes his character and determines the
differences and the similarities between him and John Chinaman. It also discusses the
Fu-Manchu thrillers and how they fit into the reality of early 20th century Britain. Fu-
Manchu embodied the fears and prejudices of the new century, with its changing
political climate. He became the sinister embodiment of fear, something John Chinaman
had not been. The Fu-Manchu thrillers enjoyed worldwide success and their Yellow
Peril allure appealed to the early 20th century readership. As the close readings of the
first three Fu-Manchu thrillers show, Fu-Manchu is an actively violent and threatening
character in a way that John Chinaman is not. Fu-Manchu is also an intelligent villain,
who at times seems almost invincible to the West. Rohmer created a villain that could
match the growing fear of the East that traditional Orientalism could not quell.
Although Fu-Manchu is a new Chinese stereotype, he is as much an Orientalist
character as John Chinaman, except he is not as easily controllable as John. The greatest
difference between John Chinaman and Fu-Manchu is intelligence. Intelligence is the
central quality of the new stereotype, because only an intelligent Chinaman could be
truly threatening to white Western identity. A stupid killer is only an animal, but an
intelligent murderer is a dangerous enemy who threatens not only physically, but also
intellectually and culturally as well. But like John Fu-Manchu will not ultimately
87
triumph. Fu-Manchus schemes to conquer England and Europe will fail because no
matter how big a threat, the West would always prevail.
I have analyzed the characters of John Chinaman and Fu-Manchu through the popular
fiction they appeared in and I have compared them and found that they differ
significantly from each other but they have some things in common as they are both
Orientalist creations. I have discussed the historical events that attributed to their
creation and popularity. In addition to this I have examined the differences and
similarities of John Chinaman and Fu-Manchu to determine how much Fu-Manchu
differs from the old submissive stereotype. The evolution of the Chinese stereotype
from John Chinaman to Fu-Manchu is dynamic and fuelled by the Yellow Peril but one
thing that never changes is that the East can never win. The West is threatened by the
East but always prevails over it in the end. Just as Fu-Manchu always fails in his
endeavours to conquer the world, because his audience enjoy the thrill of fear but would
not allow a Chinaman to succeed in his dangerous schemes. The demands of the
audience are the reason for the virtual immortality of Fu-Manchu; he cannot win, but he
cannot die either. Fu-Manchu represents the new image of the Chinese, as he is more
violent and actively malicious than John Chinaman was. He brings with him the threat
of death in a way that John Chinaman never did, and unlike John Chinaman he is
intelligent and educated. Fu-Manchu is so intelligent that whites even at times feel a
sense of inferiority when compared to him. Nevertheless Fu-Manchus mental
superiority, though a real and tangible threat, is always thwarted by whites, so that in
the end the Yellow Peril is always just a threat that is never realized.
During the course of my thesis I argued that Chinese stereotypes in popular literature
have reflected the attitudes and prejudices of the public in the 19th and early 20th
centuries and that historical events and the Yellow Peril initiated a change in image and
characterization. My thesis has shown through textual analysis and examples from the
source texts that historical events and politics have affected the image of the Chinese as
an ethnic group and the literary depiction of Chinese characters. This has been done
through a study of source texts from both the 19th and 20th centuries as well as
discussion of the pivotal historical events in China that shocked and terrified Western
colonialists and caused a shift in both the way they viewed China and the way Chinese
characters were portrayed in literature. The development of Chinese fictional characters
88
is closely connected to Orientalist attitudes and cultural perceptions. The simple
childlike fools and Devil Doctors are the makings of the exotic and inscrutable Other,
who will always remain just outside of Western Orientalist understanding.
89
Appendix:
Figure 2
Figure 1
Figure 4
Figure 3
90
Figure 5
Figure 6
Figure 7
Figure 8
91
Figure 9
Figure 10
Figure 11
Figure 12
92
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