Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/106958
Title: The dark side of the nation : essays on multiculturalism, nationalism and gender by Himani Bannerji [Book review]
Authors: Cutajar, JosAnn
Keywords: Books -- Reviews
Bannerji, Himani. The dark side of the nation: essays on multiculturalism, nationalism, and gender
Cultural pluralism -- Canada
Multiculturalism -- Canada
Minority women -- Canada
Canada -- Race relations
Issue Date: 2001
Publisher: International Council for Adult Education
Citation: Cutajar, J. (2001). The dark side of the nation: essays on multiculturalism, nationalism and gender by Himani Bannerji [Book review]. Convergence, 34(1), 129-132.
Abstract: With the help of anti-racist feminist marxism, Bannerji conducts a historical materialist review of multiculturalism in Canada. Bannerji tries to explain why this official ideology has been adopted by the Canadian state and with what consequences for non-white Canadians. Bannerji argues that Canada is a capitalist state, a liberal democracy and a white settler colony. In the 1970s, the government of the time introduced multicultural policies to mediate the fissures and ruptures created by the presence of multi-racial and multi-ethnic communities living in Canada. The state utilized the idea of multiculturalism to create a notion of a nation made up of multiple racial and ethnic communities living in harmony, with the state acting as an arbiter between them. This ideology legitimizes the Canadian nation state formation at home and abroad. This book helps draw attention to the fact that discourses that might appear transformative in their conception and implementation might in the end be helping to consolidate the hegemonic hold of certain groups, resulting in the marginalization of others. [Excerpt]
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/106958
ISSN: 00108146
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacSoWGS



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