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Wasian

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Term for individuals of Asian and White descent

Wasian is a colloquial portmanteau referring to someone who is of both White and Asian descent.[1] The term especially gained traction in 2026 due to visibility of celebrities like Alysa Liu and Hudson Williams, as well as commonplace usage by Generation Z on social media.[2] [3]

Definition

The term is a portmanteau of "Asian" and "White."[1] The term is often defined as referring to people of mixed White and East Asian heritage.[4] [2] [5] In the United States, "Asian" is usually understood as "East Asian".[5]

Historically, other terms—like hāfu , hapa, Amerasian , and Eurasian—have been used to refer to people of White and Asian descent.[4] [2] [6] Similar terms have been coined for people of other mixed ethnic backgrounds, such as Blasian ("Black" and "Asian").[4] [7] [2]

History

As TikTok became popular with younger generations in the 2020s, the platform spawned the trend #WasianCheck, which led to a proliferation of content about the experiences of people who are half Asian and half White. Sociologist Rebecca Chiyoko King-O'Riain wrote in 2022 that the term "has emerged relatively quickly largely spread and institutionalised through social media interactions on digital platforms like TikTok" and supplanted terms like hapa (a word originating in Hawaiʻi).[4] The popularity of Wasian in the 2020s has been associated more generally "the economic rise of Asia" and "greater international interest in Asian narratives".[3]

Media commentators have credited the popularity of American athlete Alysa Liu and Canadian actor Hudson Williams, among others, for increasing representation of people of mixed White and Asian heritage.

Keanu Reeves has been cited as an early point of Wasian representation in American media.[8] [7] In 2026, NPR's It's Been a Minute podcast reported on the increase in Wasian representation due to Alysa Liu's return to ice-skating at the 2026 Winter Olympics and Hudson Williams' role in Heated Rivalry . While the hosts acknowledged that "there are different waves of Wasians in U.S. history," tracing a history of the hapa term and White–Asian intermarriage in the twentieth century, they stated that "the one we're in right now is the most culturally powerful, let's say, of all of them."[7]

The South China Morning Post noted that Liu and Williams, as well as Lola Tung, Eileen Gu, and Megan Skiendiel, "have all been the focus of heavy media attention" in 2026, thus leading to newly popular discourse that "has frequently fixated on their racial identity."[3] The Huffington Post stated that the rising popularity of the term in 2026 is "an example of how attitudes around mixed-race identities are evolving".[2] CNN noted that the term became popularized alongside a growing fascination with Asian culture in the west.[9]

'Wasian' meetups were held in Central Park, New York City and Dolores Park, San Francisco in May 2026.[9] [10] [11] [12] Some mixed Asians, including Mad Tsai and Quentin Nguyen-Duy, criticized the events for allegedly excluding mixed Asians of non-white and non-East Asian descent.[5] [11] [13]

Popularity of the term spread beyond the United States including to Korea where Jeon So-mi, Vernon, and Nancy are popular Wasian K-pop stars.[14]

In culture and society

  • "Madwoman", song by Laufey, a singer-songwriter of Icelandic and Chinese descent, with a music video starring only Wasian celebrities[15] [2]
  • Wasia Project—English pop band consisting of two half-Chinese siblings[16]

References

  1. ^ a b Buchar, Lara (2026年05月11日). "'Wasians' are the heartthrobs of the moment. But what does it mean when your cultural identity is trending?". Toronto Star. Retrieved 2026年05月13日.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "'Wasians' Are On The Rise — And Famous Faces Are Helping Popularize The Term". HuffPost. 2026年04月20日. Retrieved 2026年05月13日.
  3. ^ a b c "The rise of 'Wasians' like Alysa Liu and what it means for part-Asian identity". South China Morning Post. 2026年04月30日. Retrieved 2026年05月13日.
  4. ^ a b c d King-O’Riain, Rebecca Chiyoko (2022年06月15日). "#Wasian Check: Remixing 'Asian + White' Multiraciality on TikTok". Genealogy. 6 (2): 55. doi:10.3390/genealogy6020055 . ISSN 2313-5778.
  5. ^ a b c Bose, Tulika (May 18, 2026). "Will the Wasians Let Us Sit With Them?" . The Juggernaut. Retrieved 2026年05月20日.
  6. ^ "Eurasian, n. & adj. meanings, etymology and more". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. 2025年12月01日. Retrieved 2026年05月20日.
  7. ^ a b c "Welcome to 'The Republic of Wasia' : It's Been a Minute". NPR. 2026年04月01日. Retrieved 2026年05月13日.
  8. ^ Buchar, Lara (2026年05月11日). "'Wasians' are the heartthrobs of the moment. But what does it mean when your cultural identity is trending?". Toronto Star. Retrieved 2026年05月16日.
  9. ^ a b Novak, David. "'Wasian' meetups leave some feeling seen, others excluded | CNN". www.cnn.com. Retrieved 2026年05月22日.
  10. ^ "The Wasian Meetup: Peak San Francisco or Just a Normal Day at Dolores Park?". The Dissent. 2026年05月11日. Retrieved 2026年05月22日.
  11. ^ a b Yeung, Jessica (2026年05月26日). "'Wasians' are embracing the spotlight. Not everyone feels seen". CNN . Retrieved 2026年05月27日.
  12. ^ Ravidas, Preetika (18 May 2026). "Why the 'Wasian' discourse has taken over the internet". FirstPost. Retrieved 21 May 2026.
  13. ^ "The Internet's 'Wasian Aesthetic' Obsession Is Raising Bigger Questions About Online Representation". Pulse. Retrieved 2026年05月21日.
  14. ^ Song, Seung-hyun; Yu, Soo-in (2026年06月01日). "Wasians" in Korea (Video). The Korea Herald . Retrieved 2026年06月04日 – via YouTube.
  15. ^ "Singer Laufey roped in fellow 'Wasian' celebs like Katseye's Megan for music video". The Straits Times. 2026年04月29日. ISSN 0585-3923 . Retrieved 2026年05月13日.
  16. ^ "Overordering with Wasia Project" . Retrieved 2026年05月13日.

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