1. "Canadian-First": Mixed Race Self-Identification and Canadian Belonging.
- Author
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PARAGG, JILLIAN
- Subjects
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MULTIRACIAL identity , *MULTIRACIAL people , *SOCIAL belonging , *CANADIANS , *NATIONALISM , *ETHNIC identity of Canadians , *MULTIRACIAL people in literature , *MULTICULTURALISM , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Not being read or identified by others as "Canadian" was a common thread in semi-structured in-depth interviews I conducted with 19 young adults of mixed race in a Western Canadian urban context. In this paper, I address moments of (in)ability for people of mixed race to claim "Canadian." Mixed race people have a complex relationship with identifying and narrating their identities as "Canadian" through the operation of race and ethnicity in the Canadian context, and because of ambivalent and contradictory readings of their bodies. I found that they deploy the term in three ways: by expressing a sense of being "Canadian-first," by stating that there exists an understanding that "Canadian means white," and by strategically using the term "Canadian" in their interactions with others, signaling an active appropriation of the term. However, none of these deployments are mutually exclusive: they overlap and bleed into each other, playing off and impacting one another. This paper adds to nascent Canadian Critical Mixed Race studies and also redresses a gap in the literature on "Canadian identity" by examining how the ability to claim "Canadian" is racialized through a consideration of the experiences of mixed race people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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