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PhD, University of Toronto [email protected] Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets: Azorean & (Mainland) Portuguese diasporas 15.09.11 16 th Int’l Metropol is

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Page 1: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

PhD, University of Toronto [email protected]

Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as

inheritors of & investors in contested

ethnolinguistic markets:

Azorean & (Mainland) Portuguese diasporas

15.09.1116th Int’l

Metropolis

Page 2: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Presentation objectives

1. To problematize the dominant and essentialist discourses of nationalism, multiculturalism & diaspora by looking at the Portuguese community in Toronto as a market.

2. To question how the case of the Azores and the Azorean diaspora complicates that market, and how their initiatives can be see as examples of post-nationalism (Heller 2011).

[email protected]

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Page 3: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

PhD research project Data drawn from a two-year qualitative,

ethnographic sociolinguistic study Bourdieu (1977, 1991): habitus, legitimacy, the

economics of linguistic exchanges, symbolic and material capital, language as an instrument of power

Giddens (1986): social structuration Heller (2002): critical ethnographic sociolinguistics

Primary research methods: participant observation and interviews

PhD thesis objective: to explore the social and linguistic interactions of six

Portuguese-Canadian youth from Toronto (and up to five members of their social networks) in order to understand how and why they invest in portugueseness (language, culture, identity) or not .

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[email protected]

Page 4: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Little Portugal ≈ Little Açores + +

≈ Portuguese Ethnic Origin(StatsCan, 2006)

Unofficial est. Census Canada: 500,000 410,850 Toronto: 200,000 188,110

Toronto: ≈ 70% Azorean, 30% Mainlander

How is the power within the Portuguese-Canadian community divided?

Language & identity are about markets and the unequal positioning of social actors competing for limited resources.

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[email protected]

Page 5: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Mapping & market-ing multicultural Toronto

[email protected]

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A provincial politician’s mapping of multicultural markets in Toronto (close-up)

Ruprecht, T. (2001:inside cover). Toronto’s many faces. Kingston: Quarry Press.

Page 6: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Part of Portugal’s diasporic market

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Source:Teixeira (1994:4) in Cummins & Lopes (1994).

Page 7: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Nationalist symbols

Car flag for the World Cup of soccer competition

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Page 10: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Post-nationalism?

Although the nation-state way of organizing people remains, there are ways around the official nation-state status in order to participate in the globalized new economy (Heller 2011).

In this context, diasporas can be mobilized as springboards to globalization and as spaces for the construction of global or supranational identities that challenge the hegemonic discourses of language, identity, and the nation-state.

[email protected]

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Page 11: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Azores Day & Portugal Day

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(June 2009)

Page 12: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Mobilization of Azorean diasporaPresident of the Regional Government of the Azores with the

Premier of Ontario, celebrating the Azorean regional holiday (2009)

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Page 13: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Doing it for the Holy Spirit?

Quote from Azores Day, state gala dinner in Toronto, 2009 Speech by the President of the Legislative Assembly of the

Autonomous Region of the Azores (in 2009), Francisco Manuel Coelho Lopes Cabral:

“[…] a nossa terra é enorme porque tem um tapete de mar a uni-la […] É por isso que nós estamos hoje, aqui, em Toronto, na nossa terra. Sem qualquer vontade de império, que não seja o do Espírito Santo. Sem qualquer arma de arremesso, para além do abraço do reecontro.”

“[...] our land is enormous because it has a carpet of ocean uniting it [...] That is why we are here today, in Toronto, in our land. Without any imperialist desires, apart from that of the Holy Spirit. Without any weapon to throw, apart from a reuniting hug.”

 

[email protected]

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Page 14: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

United…but also different Speech by the President of the Government of the Autonomous Region of the

Azores, Carlos César: “[…] Estamos aqui, hoje […] em Toronto, para dizer a todos os Açorianos,

residents no Canadá ou nas nossas ilhas, tal como aos espalhados pelo Mundo que, independentement da sua ventura, nos sentimos irmãos enfileirados na mesma andança, e que, unidos, nos podemos ajudar; unidos, nós, os mesmos, podemos ser mais, por que unidos temos feito muito melhor do que cogitávamos. É isso que se pede e se exalta no Dia dos Açores – aclamando as semelhanças sem olvidarmos o valor democrático e impulsionador das diferenças de que também todos somos feitos.”

“[...] We are here, today [...] in Toronto, to tell all Azoreans, residing in Canada or in our islands, as well as all those scattered throughout the world who, independent of their happiness, we feel like brothers aligned on the same track, and that, united, we can help each other; united, we can be more, because united we have done much better than we would have thought. This is what we ask for and what we exalt on Azores Day – applauding our similarities without forgetting the democratic and stimulating value of differences that also make up each one of us.”

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Page 15: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Mobilization of Azorean diaspora

“The Azores are all of us / We all make up the Azores”15

Page 16: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

“Autonomy kit”

[email protected]

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Page 17: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

“Language kit”: Ao colo da língua portuguesa

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Source:  http://magudemagude.blogspot.com/2007/09/ao-colo-de-minha-me.html

Page 18: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

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Page 20: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

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Page 21: PhD, University of Toronto emanuel.dasilva@gmail.com Positioning Portuguese-Canadian youth as inheritors of & investors in contested ethnolinguistic markets:

Future research21

• How do Portuguese nationalist and Azorean regionalist diasporic projects co-exist? Are there any tensions?

• Who benefits from these projects?

• Where does the money come from?