2000
DOI: 10.1590/s0104-71832000001400002
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Plural identities among youth of immigrant backround in Montreal

Abstract: Our research concerns the ethnic identity of youth (18-22yrs) of immigrant parentage (Greek, Portuguese, Chilean, Vietnamese and Salvadoran, with a comparison group of French-speaking Québécois youth) in Montreal. Despite the questioning of notions of ethnicity and ethnic identity that has been going on for several decades, this area of research is still marked by essentialist perspectives that do not coincide with the results of our research. The young people interviewed express fluid ethnic identities that h… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 12 publications
(5 reference statements)
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“…For decades, Quebec public discourse has been permeated by the preoccupation with language and culture as manifestations of Quebecois identity and with the right to keep one's language and culture (Meintel 2002). As argued elsewhere by Meintel (2000), these influences have affected the way identities are felt, imagined, and structured in Quebec. It offers a hospitable environment for perpetuating immigrant ethnic identities.…”
Section: The Sociohistorical Context Of Quebecmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…For decades, Quebec public discourse has been permeated by the preoccupation with language and culture as manifestations of Quebecois identity and with the right to keep one's language and culture (Meintel 2002). As argued elsewhere by Meintel (2000), these influences have affected the way identities are felt, imagined, and structured in Quebec. It offers a hospitable environment for perpetuating immigrant ethnic identities.…”
Section: The Sociohistorical Context Of Quebecmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Migrants will juggle and (re)negotiate their identities, consciously and sometimes unconsciously crossing the ethnic boundary. The negotiation of ethnic boundaries becomes even more complex with the intersections of race, class, age and gender (Ahmed, 2005; Jiménez, 2004, Meintel, 2000; Ng, 2016; Rayaprol, 2005; Vasquez, 2010). Ahmed (2005: 121) points out that Bangladeshi migrant women to the UK may vary in terms of the way they define their own identity; whereas the first generation may embrace a more ‘essentialist’ and ‘fixed’ element in terms of defining their identity through religion and culture, the next generation will have a more ‘in-between’ identity.…”
Section: Theoretical Background: From In-between To Plural Ethnicitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…De nombreuses études se sont intéressées à la spécificité propre aux relations interethniques à Montréal et tout particulièrement aux identités plurielles développées chez les immigrés montréalais de seconde génération (Meintel 1989(Meintel , 1992(Meintel , 2000 …”
Section: Le Contexte Pluriethnique Montréalaisunclassified