Danger zones and hot spots: Traversing Canadian and Australian narratives of urban multiculturalism
Contribuinte(s) |
T. Khoo |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2005
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Resumo |
The ethnicity of urban space has long been an element in the burgeoning discourse of national multiculturalisms; so much so that spatial theorist Edward Soja uses the term “ethni-city” to speak of so-called postmodern or postcolonial urban geographies (239). In our focus on the urban, we point to both the conceptual and material thresholds of multiculturalism within the borders of the city, as well as the internal urban/suburban borders that delineate belonging. These are often as strongly patrolled as larger national borders. In taking up Sneja Gunew’s call in Haunted Nations for comparative and critical work on multiculturalisms, this paper offers preliminary and exploratory avenues and points of departure, and aims to particularise the multicultural as an encounter and experience that is regulated spatially and corporeally. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
University of Queensland, Australian Studies Centre |
Palavras-Chave | #ethnicity #Urban space #multiculturalisms #Sneja Gunew #E1 #420202 Australian and New Zealand #420203 North American #420308 Multicultural, Intercultural and Cross-cultural Studies |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |