cover image Asian Mystique: Dragon Ladies, Geisha Girls, and the Myth of the Exotic Oriental

Asian Mystique: Dragon Ladies, Geisha Girls, and the Myth of the Exotic Oriental

Sheridan Prasso. PublicAffairs, $27.95 (464pp) ISBN 978-1-58648-214-5

Prasso, a former Business Week Asia editor, asks if Westerners can look objectively at the Eastern region, blinded as they are by ""issues of race and sex, fantasy and power."" It's this worldview-one the author admits succumbing to and feeling a ""sense of loss"" in giving up-that clouds cross-cultural relations. Prasso's ambitious agenda focuses on both Asian women and our perceptions of them, exploring the historical and pop cultural roots of the ""Asian Mystique"" and ending with a ""reality tour of Asia."" Her stories about the lives of Asian women from diverse cultures and socio-economic backgrounds are compelling. The Japanese woman who inspired Arthur Golden's Memoirs of a Geisha shares her distaste for the novel's ""misinterpretation"" of her ""flower and willow world."" A Chinese investment banker struggles with modern demands and traditional expectations. With the author in tow, a Filipina prostitute navigates a seedy red-light district. Prasso has an almost voyeuristic fascination with sexual mores, and the result is a frank, at times graphic, exploration of how some Asian women cope with stereotyping-and with Western males looking for one-night stands. But when the author moves from reportage to social anthropological analysis, the book loses focus. Self-conscious ruminations, such as the incongruity of dancing with Filipina prostitutes to Madonna's ""Like a Virgin,"" sometimes intrude and distract. In addition, Prasso never really gets a grip on the Asian Mystique's effects on foreign policy, concluding, not surprisingly, that it is ""much harder to measure and more difficult to prove."" Nevertheless, Prasso's work and travels have opened her eyes, and this book might do the same for others.