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Construction of Self: The Identity of Modern Japanese-Canadians

# 45218
Explores the identity of Canadians of Japanese origin living in modern Canada.
20,665 words (approx. 82.7 pages) | 133 sources | MLA | 2003 | United Kingdom
Published on: Sep 29, 2003

Paper Summary:

The study takes a broad exploratory approach to studying issues of identity in the Japanese community in Canada. Chapter I traces the historical settlement of Japanese-Canadians in Canada with reference to how Canada?s changing attitudes on dealing with immigrants has affected the way in which Japanese-Canadians perceive themselves. Chapter II researches the relationship between language and identity. Chapter III looks at two types of modern day Japanese in Canada. First, a young student studying at MIT is used as a real life case study. Second, various fictional depictions of Japanese-Canadians are used to delve deeper into issues of Japanese identity. The subject matter has not yet been specifically covered in detail by academia (although it has rather more so by fictional writing). Available sources are analyzed closely to try to uncover trends in identity. Sources used vary from academic works (both Japanese and Canadian) on history, sociology, politics, linguistics and psychology; through to personal journal entries and fictional works concerning Japanese identity written by Japanese-Canadian authors.

Introduction
The History Of Japanese-Canadians & Canadian Immigration Policy 1877-2003
The Relationship Between Language And The Formation Of Ethnic Identity
The Real And Illusory Modern Japanese-Canadian
Conclusion

From the Paper:

"Thus, using Bourdieu's analysis, it is theoretically possible to apply it to the situation of Japanese-Canadians to try to delve deeper into their ethnic self-identity and individual make-up. However, there are various flaws when trying to apply Bourdieu's work. First, Bourdieu interviewed his participants in some depth for his study in order to get a detailed profile of each. This variety of data about Japanese-Canadians is not currently available for this thesis and would need to be obtained first-hand (see "Recommendations" in Conclusion). Second, and more importantly, it is not possible to apply the same analysis intended for a Western, European nation such as France to a complex, Oriental nation such as Japan that prides itself on its "unique" ethnic identity and 90% middle-class (which, if true, renders analysis using economic capital as a variable useless anyhow)."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Construction of Self: The Identity of Modern Japanese-Canadians (2012, April 01). Retrieved May 26, 2012, from http://www.academon.co.uk/Research-Paper-Construction-of-Self-The-Identity-of-Modern-Japanese-Canadians/45218

MLA Citation:

"Construction of Self: The Identity of Modern Japanese-Canadians" 01 April 2012. Web. 26 May. 2012. <http://www.academon.co.uk/Research-Paper-Construction-of-Self-The-Identity-of-Modern-Japanese-Canadians/45218>




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Published by:

Botchan GB
Publisher Since:
Aug 15, 2003
Thank you for your interest in this paper. The author is an experienced academic, educated to Ph.D. level, who has studied at several of the most prestigious universities in the world. The author's main specialities are in literature and sociology, although enjoys researching and writing on a number of varied subjects.
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