Hyphenated Australia : putting intercultural identity on the conceptual map


Autoria(s): Loza, Jehan.
Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

Interculturality and intercultural identity is a local effect of the global movement and mixing of people, and those of intercultural identities constitute the fastest growing sector of the Australian population. In an age of globalisation and diversification, what does identity mean for those situated in-between governing notions of racial/ethnic formations, and how is intercultural identity experienced? For those informed by (at least) two cultures, what does multiculturalism, ethnicity and 'Australianness' mean, and where are these individuals positioned in relation to these structures? These questions have critical implications for the Australian nation. Within Australian discourses, interculturality and intercultural identity, in particular, has historically been excluded, rendered invisible. This dissertation is, therefore, one of facilitating visibility. Using the hyphens as a conceptual tool, I argue that in this age of accelerating globalisation the hyphens both makes visible and is made visible by interculturality. The hyphens is that grey and fluid site of intersection between structures of identity and is characterised by liminality - contestation, uncertainty, fundamentally ambivalence. Experiences of liminality, however, dissolve in any given time, opening up new terrain for creativity. Some of these emerging and creative forms of identity, as instigated by interculturality, are explored. Based on interviews with 20 daughters (and their mothers) from intercultural unions, this dissertation places intercultural identity on the Australian conceptual map and analyses the unique position occupied by those with an intercultural identity in their relationship with governing discursive formations of race/ethnicity, embodiment, nation and culture. In essence, the dissertation is concerned with examining the ways in which discursive identity structures intersect with subjective experience, and with the ways in which those with an intercultural identity negotiate those structures and their social relations. This examination raises the fundamental question: is the modernist notion of the material realities of individual lives reconcilable with the poststructural notion of identity as always located in discourse. This modernist/postmodernist tension permeates the dissertation.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30023139

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Deakin University, Faculty of Arts, School of Social and International Studies

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30023139/loza-hyphenatedaustralia-2002.pdf

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30023139/loza_jehan.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Identity #Cross-cultural orientation #Ethnopsychology #Cross-cultural studies #Biculturalism #Intercultural communication
Tipo

Thesis