Performing the National Other

2019 ◽  
pp. 135-146
Author(s):  
Frances R. Aparicio

Expanding on chapter 7’s discussion of passing as “rhetoric”, this chapter analyzes the strategic performances of Puerto Ricanness within dominant Mexican communities. Focusing on the anecdotes of two MexiRicans who resisted the pressure to Mexicanize through self-differentiation, as well as on the public celebrations of Latino ethnicities in Chicago, I argue for the productive meanings of identity as performance. Examining the visual and sonic aspects that inform the performance of the Puerto Rican minor nationality within Mexican communities, the chapter evinces how performing a national identity can also be strategic and a gesture of resistance to the dominant Mexican community in Latino Chicago.

2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-65
Author(s):  
Mary Varghese ◽  
Kamila Ghazali

Abstract This article seeks to contribute to the existing body of knowledge about the relationship between political discourse and national identity. 1Malaysia, introduced in 2009 by Malaysia’s then newly appointed 6th Prime Minister Najib Razak, was greeted with expectation and concern by various segments of the Malaysian population. For some, it signalled a new inclusiveness that was to change the discourse on belonging. For others, it raised concerns about changes to the status quo of ethnic issues. Given the varying responses of society to the concept of 1Malaysia, an examination of different texts through the critical paradigm of CDA provide useful insights into how the public sphere has attempted to construct this notion. Therefore, this paper critically examines the Prime Minister’s early speeches as well as relevant chapters of the socioeconomic agenda, the 10th Malaysia Plan, to identify the referential and predicational strategies employed in characterising 1Malaysia. The findings suggest a notion of unity that appears to address varying issues.


2012 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabija K Iaušaitė

Sociolingvistiniai tyrimai yra būtini, norint stebėti, kaip kinta svarbiausias visuomenės komunikacinius poreikius tenkinantis veiksnys ir tautą vienijantis reiškinys — kalba ir jos atmainos [Karaliūnas 2008, 50–55]. Viena rezultatyviausių tyrimo formų yra reprezentatyvus anketavimas ir gautų atsakymų analizė. Sociolingvistinius pokyčius tam tikroje šalyje (visuomenėje) rodantys tyrimo rezultatai gali būti gretinami su pagal tą pačią metodiką atlikto sociolingvistinio tyrimo rezultatais kitoje šalyje (visuomenėje). Tai leidžia stebėti įvairias panašių (arba vienodų) šiuolaikinių globalinių procesų tendencijas ir rezultatus....Gabija KiaušaitėDialects in Lithuania and Slovenia: a Sociolinguistic StudyThe article is based on a detailed survey designed to discuss the dialect usage and attitudes in Lithuania and Slovenia. The sociolinguistic investigation strongly supported by quantitative data helped to compare the attitudes of Lithuanian and Slovenian respondents in specific speech communities, their social roles and communicative situations.It was found that Lithuanian dialects have a less overt prestige as compared to Slovenian dialect usage in the public and hometown area. Lithuanian attitudes toward their own and other dialects are much less positive. In addition to that, the quantitative data has revealed the differences in the attitude of Lithuanian and Slovenian inhabitants regarding the importance of dialect in connection with the national identity. The questionnaire was administered during March and April of 2012. It consisted of multiple choice questions. The respondents were asked to fill the questionnaire over the Internet.Overall, the survey of Lithuanian and Slovenian inhabitants shows that the process of urbanization may be affecting Lithuania much more than Slovenia, where a viable and significant variation of dialects is still observable.Keywords: sociolinguistic, dialects, Lithuanian, Slovenian.


2018 ◽  
Vol 166 ◽  
pp. 99-107
Author(s):  
Shino Maeda

Image of maternal love in Grigory Chukhray’s The QuagmireMemories of the Great Patriotic War contributed to the making of a national identity in Soviet Russia, and clear gender roles are evident in Soviet propaganda war art. The image of male soldiers demonstrates the obligation to defend the fatherland against the outside enemy. On the other hand, there are images of a mother cheering for her son or a mother lamenting over a fallen soldier. It is clear that the female image belongs to the reproductive function of motherhood. The establishment presents an ideal and urges the public to internalize it by themselves. Grigory Chukhray’s film The Quagmire’s 1977 mother, however, hides her young son, who was conscripted to the front. The  film casts doubt on the Soviet war myth and asks “Why do mothers have to be reconciled to lose their sons in order to defend the fatherland?” That’s why the military purged the film from the screen. Obraz miłości macierzyńskiej w filmie Grigorija Czuchraja TrzęsawiskoWspomnienia i obrazy Wielkiej Wojny Ojczyźnianej odegrały ważną rolę w kształtowaniu tożsamości obywateli Rosji Radzieckiej. W sowieckiej propagandzie wojennej wyraźnie widać hierarchię genderową. Wizerunek żołnierza mężczyzny odnosi się do obowiązku obrony ojczyzny przed zewnętrznym wrogiem. Natomiast wizerunek matki wiwatującej na cześć zwycięstwa syna lub rodzicielki lamentującej nad poległym żołnierzem kojarzony jest z macierzyństwem. Film Grigorija Czuchraja Trzęsawisko Трясина opowiada historię matki ukrywającej powołanego do wojska i wezwanego na front syna. Film, który wkrótce po premierze wycofano z  dystrybucji, stawia pytania dotyczące funkcjonowania radzieckich mitów wojennych oraz sytuacji kobiet, które nie chcą się pogodzić ze śmiercią swych synów broniących ojczyzny.


Author(s):  
Cecilia Tossounian

Chapter 2 studies how the flapper, the archetypical modern girl, was construed by popular culture in the 1920s and 1930s. Mass media was engaged in a debate about the defining traits of the American flapper and her Argentine counterpart. While the flapper inhabited a distant land, the joven moderna combined popular fashions and mannerisms both foreign and domestic. Portrayed as an upper-class character, she went beyond the traditional female role of the devoted daughter. An oversimplified media construction, the Argentine flapper alerted the public of the dangerous effects of international consumer capitalism and Americanization on gender and national identity.


2007 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 551-586 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Stark

The black “root” has been systematically “uprooted” from the main “trunk” of the Puerto Rican nation.Jorge DuanyScholars who study Puerto Rico's past have struggled with the question of how to define the island’s national identity. Is the essence of Puerto Rican identity rooted in Spain, does it have its origins in Africa, in the legacy of the native Tainos, or is it a product of two or all three of these? This polemical question has yet to be resolved and remains a subject of much debate. The island's black past is often overlooked, and what has been written tends to focus on the enslaved labor force and its ties to the nineteenth-century plantation economy. Few works are specifically devoted to the study of the island's seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Afro-Puerto Rican population. Recent scholarship has begun to address this oversight. For example, the efforts of fugitive slaves and free black West Indian migrants making their way to Puerto Rico have been well documented. Yet, little is known about the number or identity of these runaways. How many slaves made their way to freedom in Puerto Rico, who were they, and where did they come from? Perhaps more importantly, what about their new lives on the island? How were they able to create a sense of belonging, both as individuals and as part of a community within the island's existing population and society? What follows strives to answer these questions by taking a closer look first at the number and identity of these fugitives, and second at how new arrivals were assimilated into their new surroundings through marriage and family formation while their integration was facilitated by participation in the local economy. Through their religious and civic activity Afro-Puerto Ricans were able to create a niche for themselves in San Juan and eventually a community of their own in Cangrejos. In doing so, they helped shape the island's national identity.


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