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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_000101/0155
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022_000101/0155

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ANUSHRAY SINGH PERSONAL POETICS I encountered the term “personal poetics” in Sukhmani Kohorana’s paper on Crossover Cinema in which she frames South Asian and Western crosscultural affinities as “not merely political but also personal/poetic.””” As an Indian citizen residing in Canada, I often see my work as an extension of my personal poetics: a postmodern/postcolonial performativity, challenging stereotypes and perceptions about my South Asian identity. I reflect this in my writing, films and media art; similarly, South Asian artists in Canada and the broader Western world resonate what it means to be “brown” in their host society. Similarly, through expressions rooted in mass-media products often disseminated over the internet through social media platforms, many South Asian artists in Canada express various notions attached to being an ethnic immigrant in Canada. These enunciative practices help connect various modes in a broader transnational network of South Asian diaspora dispersed across the globe — often interrupting mainstream host cultures through their hybridity — subsuming and performing identities through ambiguity in Third Space. Indian-Punjabi origin Canadian actress Sareena Parmar often struggles to negotiate her in-between identity, often perceived to “perform” her culture through “bhangra dance” or “speaking Punjabi.” This raises a pertinent question: Is cultural performativity of an immigrant based on the aspects of culture one partakes in? Is it defined by what it means to be Indian or Canadian? What if someone does not associate with stereotypical South Asian or Canadian cultural aspects? Similarly, theatre director, Rohit Chokhani questions “authenticity” and feels Canadians are searching for their identity, especially immigrants like him, whose home is both India and Canada. Both for Parmar and Chokhani, authenticity is reflected in the representation of South Asians in various facets of cultures, it is not driven by tokenism but through stories that make sense.** This bolsters authentic representations — a multifaceted one with nuance — creating audiences both is the South Asian diaspora and mainstream Canada to engage in a multicultural dialogue. Desh Pardesh, a multidisciplinary arts festival that used to be organized in Toronto annually (1982-2001) can be seen as the intersection of diasporic transnationalism with the host cultures. It was a platform for personal artistic expression of diasporic identities such as racialized minorities creating LGBTQ+ positive space with anti-imperial, anti-colonial and anti-classist/ 32 Sukhmani Khoranna, Crossover Cinema: Cross-Cultural Film from Production to Reception, New York, Routledge, 2013, 3-15. 33 Tamara Baluja, I struggle with what to do with my Indian background: Actress cast in Shakespeare set in South Asia, CBC.ca, 21 July 2020, https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ british-columbia/i-struggle-with-what-to-do-with-my-indian-background-actress-cast-inshakespeare-play-set-in-south-asia-1.5218789 (accessed 1 April 2020).

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