Anti-Chinese sentiment is a fear or dislike of China, Chinese people and/or Chinese culture; it is also referred to as Sinophobia. It is frequently directed at Chinese minorities which live outside China and involves immigration, nationalism, political ideologies, disparity of wealth, the past tributary system of Imperial China, majority-minority relations, imperial legacies, and racism.
Hong Kong Demonstrators demand that the Chinese go back to China.
Chinezenmoord, a 1740 pogrom against Chinese in Batavia
Anti-China protest by Tibetans in India in 2008
Hong Kong marches on 1 July, 2014. The sign reads, "We stand united against China".
The Yellow Peril is a racist color metaphor that depicts the peoples of East and Southeast Asia as an existential danger to the Western world.
The Yellow Terror in all His Glory, an 1899 editorial cartoon depicting a Chinese man standing over a fallen white woman. The Chinese man represents the anti-colonial Boxer movement and the woman represents Christian missionaries attacked by Boxers during the Boxer Rebellion.
Kaiser Wilhelm II used the allegorical lithograph Peoples of Europe, Guard Your Most Sacred Possessions (1895), by Hermann Knackfuss, to promote Yellow Peril ideology as geopolitical justification for European colonialism in China.
"The yellow peril", Puck cartoon, 1905
The Yellow Peril: Chinese men worked for wages lower than those a white man would accept.