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Postcolonialism%20(4):%20Identity%20and%20Hybridity

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3. Nation and Narration Identity. Outline. Starting Questions. Contemporary Contradictions: Nation vs. Globalization and Hybridity; Hybridity defined. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Postcolonialism%20(4):%20Identity%20and%20Hybridity


1
Postcolonialism (4) Identity and Hybridity

1. Colonialism and Racism 2. (Post-)Colonial
Identities 3. Nation and Narration Identity
2
Outline
  • Starting Questions
  • Contemporary Contradictions Nation vs.
    Globalization and Hybridity
  • Hybridity defined.
  • How do we identify ourselves?
  • Different Identity Strategies
  • Conclusion End of Essentialism
  • Summary and Preview

3
Starting Questions
  • What is essentialism? And constructionism?
  • Of all the possible categories of
    identitynation, race, gender, class, generation,
    educational background, job, Online
    nicknameswhich do you identify with?
  • Culturally, how do you identify yourself? Do you
    know anyone who is or is not a cultural hybrid?

4
Contemporary Contradictions Nation vs.
Immigrants
  • The nation is imagined as a community because,
    regardless of the actual inequality and
    exploitation that may prevail in each, the nation
    is always conceived as a deep, horizontal
    comradeship. (16 or in terms of family and
    people)

The Cultural Minorities on the margins ?
Hybrid Identities
5
Contemporary Contradictions Nation vs.
Globalization
  • Hybridity caused by the Global flows
  • We live in a confusing world, a world of
    criss-crossed economies, intersecting systems of
    meaning, and fragmented identities. Suddenly,
    the comforting modern imagery of nation-states
    and national languages, of coherent communities
    and consistent subjectivities, of dominant
    centers and distant margins no longer seems
    adequate (Roger Rouse 8)

1. Nationalist Movements as Unfinished Project
of Modernity (Taiwan, Canada, Palestinian) 2.
Racial conflicts within national boundaries
6
Contemporary Contradictions Nation vs.
Traveling Culture and Disapora
  • Culture travels ? Hybridity (textbook chap 4 200)
  • Diaspora identities crosses national boundaries

Nationalist Constructions of Culture and History
7
Contemporary Contradictions Disapora Identities
as Hybrid (2)
  • Hall Migration is a One-Way road with no return
  • diasporic cultures and identities are hybrid
  • "these hybrids retain strong links to and
    identifications with the traditions and places of
    their origin. But they are without the illusion
    of any return to the past They are not and never
    will be unified in the old sense, because they
    are inevitably the products of several
    interlocking histories and cultures, belonging at
    the same time to several homes- and thus to no
    particular home" (Hall, 1993, 362, cited in
    Gordon, 286).

Identities of contingency, indeterminacy, and
conflict, in terms of routes rather than roots
(201)
8
Contemporary Contradictions Disapora (3)
  • Diaspora identities crosses national boundaries
  • Possible situations 1) in flight and dispersal,
    trying to forget, 2) voluntary multiple
    migration, even embracing diaspora identity
  • both local and global
  • -- encompassing both imagined and encountered
    communities

Dispora space where the native is as much a
diasporian as the diasporian is a native
(Brash 209, textbook chap 4 104). (e.g.
internet, airport)
9
Nation vs. Hybridity A Brief Summary
  • Elements of hybridization
  • Colonialism to economic and technological
    globalization
  • Immigration to diaspora

10
Hybridity meanings
  • Original A plant of mixed origins a person
    whose background is a blend of two diverse
    cultures or traditions ?
  • Literal Meaning something heterogeneous in
    origin or composition
  • History 19th-century fear of miscegenation
  • Contemporary Interpretation
  • Homi Bhabha necessarily ambivalent encounter
    between colonial authority and the colonized
    destabilizing forces on cultural or
    epistemological levels

11
Hybridity (2) as Poetics, Identity Strategy and
Politics
  • Disapora aesthetic (e.g. rap, Hip-Hop, Michael
    Ondaatje, Salman Rushdie, ?? ??????
  • Identity Strategy against essentialist or purist
    definitions of identity.
  • From the fear of miscegenation to the celebration
    of contamination.
  • Controversies
  • Aesthetics over politics the political and
    socio-logical struggles of minorities can be
    downplayed
  • Representation of the Imaginary Homelands.

12
Postcolonial Identities Identity and Strategies
(textbook 202)
  • Strategies
  • Essentialism (?????,?????)
  • Mimicry (Self-Denial)
  • Conscious Mimicry
  • Re-Creation,
  • Cultural Syncreticism,
  • Identity Policy (Stance)
  • Separatism (Nativism),
  • Assimilation.
  • Integration, Active participation,

Duality and Hybridity
13
Immigrants Identity Strategies as Influenced by
Dominant Cultural Policies
Strategic Adoption of Identities Trans- National
Hyphenated Identity Acculturation Process Active Integration Discrimination Assimilation Separatism, Sojourner
Fusion and recreation of Cultures Acculturation Process Active Integration Discrimination Assimilation Assimilation
Strategic Mixing of Cultures Self-Denial White Mask, Black Skin
Identities
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
fragmentation
Translation and combination
14
The Other Factors influencing Identity Strategies
  • Immigration Policy of the Dominant Culture
  • Political Events (e.g. the Gulf Crisis, the 911
    terrorist attack)
  • Education Policy
  • Influences of Mother culture

Access to two cultural codes
  • Generation and class (i.e. time length of
    acculturation and the difficulties involved).
  • Personal Experience including that of love and
    childhood trauma

15
Conclusion
  • The End of Essentialism means (206)
  • Identity is a process of identification (through
    story telling, sense-making, but also through
    radical changes and contingent choices).
  • The issue of race (or culture, nation) always
    appear historically in articulation, in
    formation, with other categories and divisions
    and are constantly crosses and recrossed by the
    categories of class, gender and ethnicity. (Hall
    1996b444)
  • We are a weave of multiple beliefs, attitudes
    and language (207)

16
Conclusion (2)
  • The End of Essentialism means (206)
  • In Identity politics, we can choose to fix our
    identities strategically.
  • Identity politics, however, can be replaced by
    politics of place (where I am), or even travel
    (place even further pluralized as sites of
    travel and encounters).

17
You have learned General Definition of Identity
??
??
??
??
Body, Desire, Work, Experience, Memory/Trauma
18
You have learned . . .
  • Cultural, Racial and National Identities are far
    from being natural, essential or stable.
  • Rather, they are constructed by colonial,
    political and social institutions, and we are
    placed in different subject positions.
  • Also, they are destabilized by the conflicts
    among these forces, as well as the flows of
    capital, commodities, images, technologies and
    people in this world of globalization.
  • In those positions which form a network (or a
    weave), we are both conditioned to perform in
    certain ways, and get to choose various
    strategies of identification.

19
What Next?
  • How Identity gets influenced/re-defined by
    Postmodernity, Postmodernism and trauma
  • Next Week
  • 1. Post-Fordism, Multinational Capitalism and
    Consumer Culture
  • 2. In Country in the Vietnam War discourses

20
Postmodern Identity? Modern Chimera ???????
  • Half Man - Half Animal Mask, by INUIT (Eskimo)
    Alaska, Washington State Museum
    http//sorrel.humboldt.edu/rwj1/ESK/esk18g.html
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