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The Dialectics of Multicultural Identity: Learning from Canada
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Elke Winter
Published/Copyright:
June 1, 2009
This paper theorizes the multiculturalization of national identity. Concentrating on the Canadian case, it examines newspaper discourses from the Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star during the 1990's. The analysis reveals that both Canada/USA comparisons and English Canada/Quebec comparisons play crucial roles for the construction of multicultural Canadian identity. The results from the empirical analysis are then used to nuance existing theories of multicultural nationalism.
Published Online: 2009-6-1
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Keywords for this article
multiculturalism;
Canada;
Quebec;
nationalism;
media discourse
Articles in the same Issue
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- A Rational Calculus of Voting Considering Coalition Signals: The 2005 German Bundestag Election as an Example
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- Sources of Euroscepticism: Utilitarian Interest, Social Distrust, National Identity and Institutional Distrust
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- Organizational Change in Local Governments: The Impact of the Danish Local Government Reform
- Energy Policy: Concepts, Actors, Instruments and Recent Developments
- How to Coerce a Multi-Dimensional System into a Undimensional Frame: Israel's 1996 Electoral Change
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- On the Issue of Relations between the E.U. and Eastern European Countries
- Yoshida Shigeru's "Counter Infiltration" Plan against China: The Plan for Japanese Intelligence Activities in Mainland China 1952-1954
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