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From:Prairie Schooner (Vol. 85, Issue 4)Apprenticed at four to a dark witch with strange words, who moved figures on a board, speaking a tongue to which my ancestors were born. I see it in the buses, government forms. Mother tongue a native son that can...
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From:CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture (Vol. 11, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe following Bibliography is with focus on works in cultural studies scholarship. While the bibliography contains mostly monographs, it includes selected articles in learned journals; it includes items on music, film,...
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From:Alternatives: Global, Local, Political (Vol. 33, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe article explores the proliferation of discourses on (anti) terror and the production of discursive "peripheries" that provide a rationale for social exclusion, ethnic intolerance, and governmental disciplining after...
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From:ARIEL (Vol. 38, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe use of language can be a potent site of postcolonial resistance, despite--and, perhaps, because of--how often it has been used as a tool of imperialist stratification. The way a person speaks, including...
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From:Daedalus (Vol. 130, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION SINCE THE DISMANTLING OF APARTHEID, white people in South Africa have not experienced a tangible decline in living Standards. [1] Most still live in big suburban houses, drive expensive cars, and send...
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From:Queen's Quarterly (Vol. 124, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedDo you remember skipping to that song? If you grew up in the '50s in the UK you might. A good friend of mine remembers it well. How shocking and sad that such innocent scenes actually promoted prejudice and intolerance....
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From:Trames (Vol. 22, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis article examines how ethnic minorities negotiate ethnicity-based boundaries and deal with stigmatisation. This is exemplified by the case of the Russian-speaking women in Estonia. To arrive at a more comprehensive...
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From:Anthropology of the Middle East (Vol. 4, Issue 2) Peer-Reviewed
The Fereydani Georgian representation of identity and narration of history: a case of emic coherence
The Fereydani Georgians are Shi'a Muslims, while the Georgians of Georgia are predominantly Orthodox Christians. This article deals with the mechanism by which Fereydani Georgians reaffirm their Shi'a identity in... -
From:Canadian Ethnic Studies Journal (Vol. 41, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedAbstract This paper explores the stages of ethnic and religious adaptation and transformation of two immigrant groups: Christian Orthodox Egyptians--Copts--and Dutch Canadian Calvinists. While the Copts are...
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From:Prairie Schooner (Vol. 93, Issue 1)Nothing we do fucks us over Much. No fear of PD bullets Shredding bodies during walks. No "Random" extra screenings, legal Status checks. We don't appear in Hillary's aggrieved peoples list. Privileged Men of Color we...
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From:Post Script (Vol. 38, Issue 2-3) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT After establishing meta-performance as the film's main formal device, the essay shows how, in Alejandro Jodorowsky's film The Dance of Reality (La danza de la realidad, Chile, 2013), the Jewish protagonists'...
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From:Oregon Historical Quarterly (Vol. 113, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedTHE HISTORICAL ACCOUNTS of Oregon women's early enfranchisement rarely include the voices of Latinas who were already nurturing their families and their small but thriving communities in the eastern part of the state in...
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From:Ethnic Studies Review (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2) Peer-Reviewed
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From:Canadian Ethnic Studies Journal (Vol. 51, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract This paper explores my ethnic claims in relation to the emergence of a recognizable Indian Hakka community in Toronto, Canada. I undertake an autoethnographic analysis of the changes and evolution in how I...
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From:Canadian Ethnic Studies Journal (Vol. 46, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract This paper provides an overview of the Latin American population in Canada based on data extracted from the 2011 census and from a survey conducted in 2013 with an oversample of Latin American immigrants, as...
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From:New England Review (Vol. 40, Issue 3) Peer-Reviewedbalsam pear. wrinkled gourd. leafy thing raised from seed. pungent goya, ampalaya: cut & salt at the sink. spoon pulp from bumpy rind, brown half-moons in garlic & sparking mantika. like your nanay did. like your lola...
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From:Black Renaissance/Renaissance Noire (Vol. 48, Issue 5)ABSTRACT The phrase, "enabling environment," is a recurrent decimal in the rhetoric of most Nigerian politicians, implying the urgency to create it and fast-forward development. But whatever that means in praxis...
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From:Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques (Vol. 47, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis article explores Mark Abrams, Richard Rose, and Rita Hinden's 1960 publication Must Labour Lose? in order to demonstrate that contemporary debates around British identity and political culture are nothing new. The...
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From:New Zealand Journal of Psychology (Vol. 48, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedEthnicity is a key variable in social science research and is often assumed to be a stable construct. Yet, for more and more individuals in New Zealand's diversified society, ethnicity is flexible and individuals may...
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From:African American Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedClem Spender's child--growing up on charity in a Negro hovel, or herded in one of the plague-houses they called Asylums. No: the child came first--she felt it in every fibre of her body.--Edith Wharton, "The Old Maid"...