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Reflections on 'Performing' Canadian-ness as a way of 'Passing'
Author(s) -
Saba Alvi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cultural and pedagogical inquiry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1916-3460
DOI - 10.18733/cpi29574
Subject(s) - hospitality , identity (music) , space (punctuation) , meaning (existential) , sociology , order (exchange) , gender studies , aesthetics , media studies , social psychology , psychology , political science , tourism , linguistics , art , law , philosophy , finance , economics , psychotherapist
This reflective essay explores my family’s intergenerational experiences of belonging and exclusion in and through Canadian spaces. I share how my parents, first generation Canadians, navigated cultural and religious traditions in order to help their children “pass” as Canadians–meaning, performing “norms” of perceived “Canadian-ness” to fit in. For me, the implications of this resulted in tensions around my identity and self-worth. I unpack personal stories of residing within a “third space,” as a second generation Canadian who identifies as and is also visibly identified as, South Asian and Muslim. I close the essay by appealing to Derrida’s concept of “unconditional hospitality” as a pedagogical parenting and teaching tool to inform my own children’s multifaceted identities as Canadians.

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