Talking about Difference : Encounters in Culture, Language and Identity / edited by Carl E. James and Adrienne Shadd.
Collaborateur(s) : James, Carl | Shadd, Adrienne L. (Adrienne Lynn).
Éditeur : Toronto : Between The Lines, 1994Édition : 1st ed.Description :ix, 244 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.ISBN : 0921284934 (pbk).Sujet(s) : Multiculturalism -- Canada -- Literary collectionsClassification CDD :306.4/46/0971 Ressources en ligne : Check the UO Library catalog.Type de document | Site actuel | Cote | Numéro de copie | Statut | Date d'échéance | Code à barres |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Livres | CR Julien-Couture RC (Teaching) General Stacks | 306.4/46/0971 (Parcourir l'étagère) | 1 | Disponible | A020092 |
Includes bibliographical references.
"In Talking about Difference, Canadians from diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds - Aboriginal, African, Jewish, East European, and Asian - present their impressions of what it's like to grow up in, immigrate to, or work in Canada. Their personal stories illuminate the complex ways in which culture, race, class and identity find expression in our daily lives.
The stories - variously warm and harsh, humorous and thought-provoking and always engaging - deal with the everyday questions of who is really Canadian, of growing up and living in more than one culture, of stereotyping, and of confronting racism. The range of experiences and of styles - essays, letters, personal narratives, and journalistic articles - offers an entertaining and instructive glimpse of life in a country with a rapidly changing and vibrant population mix." (Book Cover)
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Learning from Encounters / Carl E. James and Adrienne Shad
Part I: WHO'S A CANADIAN, ANYWAY?
Where Are You Really From? Notes of an "Immigrant" from North Buxton, Ontario / Adrienne Shadd
But What Is Your Nationality? / Susan Judith Ship
Québécitude: An Ambiguous Identity / Guy Bédard
I want to call myself Canadian / Katalin Szepesi
Hello...My Name is... / Katalin Szepesi
Part II: GROWING UP
My Mother Used to Dance / Valerie Bedassigae Pheasant
Zebra: Growing up Black and White in Canada / Lawrence Hill
Growing up Ukrainian in Toronto / Jerry Diakiw
I Ain`t Sitting Beside HER / Shyrose Jaffer
Present Company Excluded, of Course / Stanley Isoki
My New Home / Denny Hunte
Grade Six, 1993 / Kai James
Part III: IDENTITIES: LIVING IN MANY WORLDS
Revealing Moments: The Voice of One who Lives with Labels /
Didi Khayatt
Is it Japanese Artist or Artist who is Japanese? / Lillian Blakey
Being German, Being Canadian /
Gottfried Paasche
Why Admit You Are an Eskimo? / Doris J. Saunders
When an Immigrant Meets an Aboriginal / Pui Yee Beryl Tsang
Part IV: RACE, PRIVILEGE, AND CHALLENGES
I've Never Had A Black Teacher Before / Carl E. James
White Teacher, Black Literature / Leslie Sanders
White Privilege: What's In It for Me? / Karen Lynn
Learning from Discomfort: A Letter to my Daughters / Barb Thomas
Part V: STEREOTYPING IS A COMMON PRACTICE, BUT...
Stereotyping / Kai James
I Didn't Know You Were Jewish...and Other Things Not To Say When You Find Out / Ivan Kalmar
But You Are Different: In Conversation with a Friend / Sabra Desai
Part VI: CONFRONTING RACISM
The "Race Consciousness" of a South Asian (Canadian, of Course) Female Academic / Arun Mekherjee
One Family. Indivisible? Or Me, and Two of My Children / Boyce, Robert and Belle Richardson
There's A White Man in My Bed: Scenes from Interracial Marriage / Pui Yee Beryl Tsang
Black Nationalists Beware! You Could Be Called a Racist for Being "Too Black and African" / Henry Martey Codjoe
Bibliography
Biographical Notes
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