Dirty Foreigner: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
prefix>Import Bot
(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.DirtyForeigner 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.DirtyForeigner, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
No edit summary
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{trope}}
One of the easiest ways to look down upon another person is to make fun of their personal hygiene. This extends sometimes to entire nationalities. Thus, the Dirty Foreigner trope was born.
One of the easiest ways to look down upon another person is to make fun of their personal hygiene. This extends sometimes to entire nationalities. Thus, the '''Dirty Foreigner''' trope was born.


This trope is strange in that it, in particular, unlike the [[Funny Foreigner]], is a [[Discredited Trope]] at best, possibly verging on a [[Dead Horse Trope]], and is most often used today in subversion, as a quick and easy way to tell that a character has a prejudice against another group, and that character is usually painted in a negative light.
This trope is strange in that it, in particular, unlike the [[Funny Foreigner]], is a [[Discredited Trope]] at best, possibly verging on a [[Dead Horse Trope]], and is most often used today in subversion, as a quick and easy way to tell that a character has a prejudice against another group, and that character is usually painted in a negative light.


[[No Real Life Examples]], please. There is a reason that the character who implements this trope is usually looked upon in a negative light.
{{noreallife|there is a reason that the character who implements this trope is usually looked upon in a negative light.}}


See also [[The Pig Pen]].
See also [[The Pig Pen]].
{{examples|Examples:}}
{{examples}}


== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* [[Cloudcuckoolander|Osaka]] begins wondering along the lines of this trope at one point in ''[[Azumanga Daioh (Manga)|Azumanga Daioh]]''.
* [[Cloudcuckoolander|Osaka]] begins wondering along the lines of this trope at one point in ''[[Azumanga Daioh]]''.
{{quote| '''Osaka''': In American homes.. (...) You can go inside without your shoes, right?<br />
{{quote|'''Osaka''': In American homes.. (...) You can go inside without your shoes, right?
'''Yukari-sensei''': Yes..<br />
'''Yukari-sensei''': Yes..
'''Osaka''': [[Fridge Horror|Then what if they step on dog poop and go back inside home without noticing. What if the American dad, mom, brothers and sisters step on dog poop and go inside without noticing?]] }}
'''Osaka''': [[Fridge Horror|Then what if they step on dog poop and go back inside home without noticing. What if the American dad, mom, brothers and sisters step on dog poop and go inside without noticing?]] }}


Line 24: Line 24:
* In [[Isaac Asimov]]'s ''[[The Caves of Steel]]'' protagonist Elijah Baley notes that the Earth rhyme against the foreign "Spacers" (people who settled worlds besides Earth) always seems to include "Dirty Spacers", and that "dirty" seems to be a common insult against those you hate. Ironically, the Spacers consider Earth people as dirty, and are correct, as the Spacers have eliminated most communicable diseases and compared to them, Earth people are bags of disease and a danger to Spacers due to a mostly unused Spacer immune system.
* In [[Isaac Asimov]]'s ''[[The Caves of Steel]]'' protagonist Elijah Baley notes that the Earth rhyme against the foreign "Spacers" (people who settled worlds besides Earth) always seems to include "Dirty Spacers", and that "dirty" seems to be a common insult against those you hate. Ironically, the Spacers consider Earth people as dirty, and are correct, as the Spacers have eliminated most communicable diseases and compared to them, Earth people are bags of disease and a danger to Spacers due to a mostly unused Spacer immune system.
** In addition, when Elijah Baley visits a Spacer world in the sequel, the bathroom is so clean it gleams (because it is cleaned by robots after every use and uses advanced materials) that he wonders how he will adjust when he had to go back to using communal bathrooms on Earth.
** In addition, when Elijah Baley visits a Spacer world in the sequel, the bathroom is so clean it gleams (because it is cleaned by robots after every use and uses advanced materials) that he wonders how he will adjust when he had to go back to using communal bathrooms on Earth.
* Historical downtimers are treated this way in [[Time Scout (Literature)|Time Scout]].
* Historical downtimers are treated this way in [[Time Scout]].
* In [[Tom Sharpe]]'s novels, the mutual respect with which the two kinds of white South Africans look upon each other... both British-descended and Dutch-descended Afrikaaners will use the trope of soap-innocence to describe each other...
* In [[Tom Sharpe]]'s novels, the mutual respect with which the two kinds of white South Africans look upon each other... both British-descended and Dutch-descended Afrikaaners will use the trope of soap-innocence to describe each other...


== [[Live Action TV]] ==
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
* ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV)|Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'': Anya punishes a philanderer. When his girlfriend wishes he was a frog, Anya makes him French. Now he smells.
* ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'': Anya punishes a philanderer. When his girlfriend wishes he was a frog, Anya makes him French. Now he smells.
* The very first line in ''[[The Drew Carey Show]]'' was an [[Orphaned Punchline]] about this.
* The very first line in ''[[The Drew Carey Show]]'' was an [[Orphaned Punchline]] about this.
{{quote| '''Lewis''': ...and that's why the French don't wash.}}
{{quote|'''Lewis''': ...and that's why the French don't wash.}}
* This appears in various iterations of ''[[Star Trek (Franchise)|Star Trek]]'' as a stereotype of Klingons; Starfleet crewmen make racist jokes about Klingon hygeine and body odor in ''[[Star Trek VI the Undiscovered Country (Film)|Star Trek VI the Undiscovered Country]]'' and Q makes similar barbs about Worf in ''[[Star Trek the Next Generation (TV)|The Next Generation]]'', even in Worf's presence (he's a [[Physical God|god]], what could Worf do to him?).
* This appears in various iterations of ''[[Star Trek]]'' as a stereotype of Klingons; Starfleet crewmen make racist jokes about Klingon hygiene and body odor in ''[[Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country|Star Trek VI the Undiscovered Country]]'' and Q makes similar barbs about Worf in ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation|The Next Generation]]'', even in Worf's presence (he's a [[Physical God|god]], what could Worf do to him?).


== [[Radio]] ==
== [[Radio]] ==
* ''[[This American Life]]'': in a bit by David Sedaris that takes place while he's living in France, on the French subway he [[Bilingual Backfire|overhears]] an ugly American [[Hawaiian Shirted Tourist]] and his wife talking loudly about (among other things) how much French people stink. Including Sedaris, who (a) isn't French, he's only living there and (b) just took a bath.
* ''[[This American Life]]'': in a bit by David Sedaris that takes place while he's living in France, on the French subway he [[Bilingual Backfire|overhears]] an ugly American [[Hawaiian-Shirted Tourist]] and his wife talking loudly about (among other things) how much French people stink. Including Sedaris, who (a) isn't French, he's only living there and (b) just took a bath.


== [[Web Original]] ==
== [[Web Original]] ==
Line 43: Line 43:
[[Category:Pages Needing Wicks]]
[[Category:Pages Needing Wicks]]
[[Category:Dirty Foreigner]]
[[Category:Dirty Foreigner]]
[[Category:Trope]]

Latest revision as of 21:36, 23 September 2018

One of the easiest ways to look down upon another person is to make fun of their personal hygiene. This extends sometimes to entire nationalities. Thus, the Dirty Foreigner trope was born.

This trope is strange in that it, in particular, unlike the Funny Foreigner, is a Discredited Trope at best, possibly verging on a Dead Horse Trope, and is most often used today in subversion, as a quick and easy way to tell that a character has a prejudice against another group, and that character is usually painted in a negative light.

No real life examples, please; there is a reason that the character who implements this trope is usually looked upon in a negative light.

See also The Pig Pen.

Examples of Dirty Foreigner include:


Anime and Manga

Comic Books

  • In Viz, a foaming at the mouth rabid dog enters Britain through the then recently opened Channel Tunnel, followed shortly by its French owner, who explains that the dog isn't rabid but ate some soap having mistaken it for cheese, because we do not have soap in France.

Film

  • Borat portrays Kazakhs this way.

Literature

  • In Isaac Asimov's The Caves of Steel protagonist Elijah Baley notes that the Earth rhyme against the foreign "Spacers" (people who settled worlds besides Earth) always seems to include "Dirty Spacers", and that "dirty" seems to be a common insult against those you hate. Ironically, the Spacers consider Earth people as dirty, and are correct, as the Spacers have eliminated most communicable diseases and compared to them, Earth people are bags of disease and a danger to Spacers due to a mostly unused Spacer immune system.
    • In addition, when Elijah Baley visits a Spacer world in the sequel, the bathroom is so clean it gleams (because it is cleaned by robots after every use and uses advanced materials) that he wonders how he will adjust when he had to go back to using communal bathrooms on Earth.
  • Historical downtimers are treated this way in Time Scout.
  • In Tom Sharpe's novels, the mutual respect with which the two kinds of white South Africans look upon each other... both British-descended and Dutch-descended Afrikaaners will use the trope of soap-innocence to describe each other...

Live-Action TV

Lewis: ...and that's why the French don't wash.

Radio

  • This American Life: in a bit by David Sedaris that takes place while he's living in France, on the French subway he overhears an ugly American Hawaiian-Shirted Tourist and his wife talking loudly about (among other things) how much French people stink. Including Sedaris, who (a) isn't French, he's only living there and (b) just took a bath.

Web Original

  • "Tales of the White Street Society" by Grady Hendrix has the very obviously prejudiced protagonist repeatedly claim this of the Irish.