Cover
Contents
Introduction: Rethinking National Identity in Multicultural Canada
Part 1. Multiculturalism from Historical and Indigenous Perspectives
Chapter 1. Fifty Years of Multiculturalism: A Riddle, a Mystery, an Enigma
Chapter 2. Refusing Minoritization: Indigenous People and the Politics of Multiculturalism
Chapter 3. Toward an Emotional Geography of Language for Rethinking Canadian Identity in a Transnational World
Part 2. Redefining Identities in Educational Contexts
Chapter 4. Canadian Identity from a Multicultural Perspective: Foregrounding Immigrant and Indigenous Voices in an ESL Course
Chapter 5. Reconstruction of Canadian Identity in Second Language Education: Creating an Inclusive Classroom for English Language Learners
Chapter 6. Les enjeux du plurilinguisme en milieu scolaire francophone minoritaire : Inclusion et consruction identitaire polymorphe
Part 3. Beyond Marked Identities in Literature
Chapter 7. The Case for Literary Extroversion and Human Consciousness Expansion in Canadian Literature: Writing, Identity, and Belonging beyond the Anglo-Saxon Ethic and Aesthetic
Chapter 8. Confronting Exclusion in English Canadian Literature: Portugese Canadian Hybrid and Hyphenated Voices and Identities
Part 4. Elevating Transcultural Identities in National Spaces
Chapter 9. A Transcultural Reconstruction of Identity and Inclusion: The Cambodian Canadian Experience
Chapter 10. The Conundrum of Reconstructing Canada’s Identity without Reconciliation
Chapter 11. “Que Soy Yo?”: Identity and Belonging among Central Americans in Canada
Part 5. Belonging in Foreign Spaces
Chapter 12. Reimagin(in)g Neighbourhood and Belonging: Youth Citizenship in Practice
Chapter 13. Suppression for the Sake of Survival: Multisectoral Voices on Belonging and Anti-Racism
Chapter 14. Diversifying Unity and Unifying Diversity: Christian Hospitality in Multicultural Presbyterian Churches in Toronto
Chapter 15. Yiddish in Canada: A Study of the Rise and Fall of a Unique Form of Cultural and Linguistic Diversity
Part 6. Rethinking “Canadian Identity” from Socio-Cultural Perspectives of Inclusion
Chapter 16. “But Some Are More Equal than Others”: On Black Canadians’ Sense of Belonging and Truncated Citizenship
Chapter 17. Canadian Multiculturalism in the Neo-Liberal Era: Discourses of Race, Asianness, and Assimilation in Maclean’s “Too Asian?”
Chapter 18. Intercultural Mediation: A Necessity for Identity Reconstruction Observed in Contemporary Quebec
Part 7. Gendered, Racialized, and Transnational Identities Reconstructing “Canadian Identity”
Chapter 19. Self-Employment among Immigrant and Migrant Women and Reconstruction of Canadian Identity from Intersecting Marginal Positions
Chapter 20. Migration and the Paradox of Canadian Bilingualism: The Experience of the Sub-Saharan African Francophone Immigrants in the Minoritized Francophone Community of the GTA
Contributors