Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Within the United States, Asians as an ethnic group are perceived as more feminine in comparison to whites, while blacks are perceived as more masculine

Within the heterosexual dating market, men tend to prefer women who personify the feminine ideal while women prefer men who embody masculinity. Men are more attracted to Asian women relative to black women, while women are more attracted to black men relative to Asian men. Even more interesting, the more a man valued femininity the more likely he was attracted to an Asian women and the less likely he was attracted to an black women. The same effect occurred for women, with attraction to masculinity driving the differential attraction to black men and Asian men. among black-white marriages, 73% had a black husband and a white wife, while among Asian-white marriages, 75% had a white husband and an Asian wife. An even more pronounced pattern emerged in Asian-black marriages, in which 86% had a black husband and an Asian wife. In a study in which participants evaluated job candidates, Asians were more likely to be selected for a leadership position that required collaboration and relationship building, traits typically perceived as feminine. Black candidates were more likely to be chosen for positions that required a fiercely competitive approach, typically seen as masculine. The more a sport was perceived to be masculine the greater the relative number of black to Asian athletes who played that sport at the collegiate level, with blacks more likely to participate in the most masculine sports.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

For some reason the image of East Asians as passive still persists even though it's wrong. There is a difference between being passive and passive-aggressive.

Anonymous said...

Isn't passive-aggressive kind of a feminine thing to do? Most men don't go in for that sort of thing.