This article ethnographically explores the ways in which members of an Italian studies book club in the small north-western Ontario (Canada) city of Thunder Bay express their migrant subjectivity by and through a discussion of Penny Petrone’s memoir, Breaking the Mould. It is framed within a postmodern framework that draws attention to how people engage with a local discourse of Italian-Canadian-ness grounded on notions of homeland, heritage culture, and selfhood and challenged by notions of gender, immigrant generational position, and socio-economic class. It draws attention to the problematic of identity and highlights how vexation, tension, contradiction, rupture, and contestation is part and parcel of an Italian-Canadian migrant subject...
grantor: University of TorontoThis is a narrative inquiry into the experience of six secon...
This paper examines how migration redefines family narratives and dynamics. Through a parallel betwe...
This thesis offers an analysis of the rhetoric of Italianità or "Italianicity" "spoken" via an arch...
Drawing on Paul Moses’ An Unlikely Union: The Love-Hate Story of New York’s Irish and Italians (2015...
Migrant literature is the artistic exemplification of border-crossing: from the linguistic hybridity...
grantor: University of TorontoThis essay examines the nature and persistence of ethnicity ...
The article addresses the theme of nostos by referring to the journeys of three authors of Italian h...
A two-way bond between translation and migration has appeared in the most recent texts in the social...
We are currently in an era characterized by rapid movement; movement of people, products, resources,...
Rich in history and tradition, canzone Napoletana have been celebrated and venerated around the worl...
grantor: University of TorontoThe aim of this thesis is to present an examination of texts...
During the 1970s and the 1980s, Italian Canadian Literature in English represented a thriving field ...
This article approaches the study of incorporation of ‘visible minority’ immigrants in Peterborough,...
Italian CanadiansimmigrantsCanadaMigliore, Sam and Margaret Dorazio-Migliore. "Italian Canadian Cult...
Studying the rocky road towards the construction of an Italian identity forever threatened by disint...
grantor: University of TorontoThis is a narrative inquiry into the experience of six secon...
This paper examines how migration redefines family narratives and dynamics. Through a parallel betwe...
This thesis offers an analysis of the rhetoric of Italianità or "Italianicity" "spoken" via an arch...
Drawing on Paul Moses’ An Unlikely Union: The Love-Hate Story of New York’s Irish and Italians (2015...
Migrant literature is the artistic exemplification of border-crossing: from the linguistic hybridity...
grantor: University of TorontoThis essay examines the nature and persistence of ethnicity ...
The article addresses the theme of nostos by referring to the journeys of three authors of Italian h...
A two-way bond between translation and migration has appeared in the most recent texts in the social...
We are currently in an era characterized by rapid movement; movement of people, products, resources,...
Rich in history and tradition, canzone Napoletana have been celebrated and venerated around the worl...
grantor: University of TorontoThe aim of this thesis is to present an examination of texts...
During the 1970s and the 1980s, Italian Canadian Literature in English represented a thriving field ...
This article approaches the study of incorporation of ‘visible minority’ immigrants in Peterborough,...
Italian CanadiansimmigrantsCanadaMigliore, Sam and Margaret Dorazio-Migliore. "Italian Canadian Cult...
Studying the rocky road towards the construction of an Italian identity forever threatened by disint...
grantor: University of TorontoThis is a narrative inquiry into the experience of six secon...
This paper examines how migration redefines family narratives and dynamics. Through a parallel betwe...
This thesis offers an analysis of the rhetoric of Italianità or "Italianicity" "spoken" via an arch...