Affiliation:
1. Department of Sociology, St Lawrence University, Canton, NY, USA
Abstract
This article explores ordinary individuals’ understandings of nationhood. In so doing, it focuses on the case of Armenian migrants from Turkey to Canada and their conceptualizations of the host country. The paper captures multiple strands of nationhood and argues that these are pertinent to different boundary-making processes. The outer boundary of nationhood is defined along inclusive and civic lines where difference is recognized and appreciated. Living with difference, on the other hand, brings to the fore the tension between recognizing it on the one hand and accommodating it on the other. The case study further reveals how the exercise of state power and individuals’ encounters with the state shape their understandings of nationhood.
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Cultural Studies