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022_000101/0000

Minorities in Canada. Intercultural investigations

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Field of science
Kultúrakutatás, kulturális sokféleség / Cultural studies, cultural diversity (12950)
Series
Károli könyvek. Tanulmánykötet
Type of publication
tanulmánykötet
022_000101/0027
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022_000101/0027

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ELIZABETH TROTT had to do with racism, low paying jobs, affordable housing and other problems associated with settlement in a new country." Ihe nation state needed to pay more attention not to cultural differences, but to the roots of growth and development regardless of ones background. Efforts under way to develop and promote the idea of Canada were overridden by the marketing ploys at work. The topic for promotion was ‘multiculturalism’ and the market took note. Capitalism purportedly offers a clean slate beyond the biases and cultural specifics of multiculturalism. Surely an economic system should be able to level the playing field. Race, gender, culture and whatever god you believe in should not be factors in the markets. Labour and produce work according to simple rules, supply and demand should offer equal chances of success to those who participate. Only merit in performance should distinguish participants. Or so we are led to believe. Colin Mooers argues otherwise. An intense focus on multicultural difference objectifies difference in a way that disguises racism and other social inequalities. As long as difference is the focus, it masks the underlying reality of the individual’s life and culture. Cultural activities, products, and indeed any marketable contributions, perhaps playing on a team, or writing for a newspaper, become a focal point of attention — a fetish, Mooers claims, of marketability. In short, marketing ‘multiculturalism’ as a visible and necessary component ofa healthy capitalist society condemns a person to difference by celebrating the appearance, and that celebration is considered to be sufficient recognition and status. The reality is that members of cultures, now regarded as stereotyped commodities, are denied the opportunity to seek similarities with those they live with, but are reminded endlessly of their difference. Freedom of choice regarding who to be and not to be is denied by the perpetual ploys of the discourse of multiculturalism. Should one decide to see oneselfas a Canadian, the hype surrounding difference makes that wish extremely forlorn. Should one sense that the marketed form of multiculturalism is disguising racism one is even less able to make a case: Multiculturalism thus claims to have resolved the problem of ‘difference’ while, like the neurotic, it represses its own terrible secret — that beneath the veil of multicultural equality lies more systemic forms of racialization. The fetishism of multiculturalism, as with that of the commodity, involves a forgetting of origins; meanings are detached from their sources and hypostasized. Subjects are invited to invest in and define themselves in terms of these reified forms. As such, multiculturalism is an ideology of denial. It asks the oppressed to make an affective investment in the reified ethnicities it establishes and to forget those bodily memories of racism which rear up from everyday life but which now find no 4 Colin Mooers, Multiculturalism and the Fetishism of Difference, Socialist Studies, Vol. 1, No. 2 (2005), 96. + 26 +

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