Welcome
We are pleased and excited to announce this interdisciplinary conference. The study of identity, whether from a sociological, ethnographic, anthropological or historical perspective, has been a widely debated topic. As real or imagined social constructs, identities are continuously contested. Involved in a relentless process of becoming, they negotiate between an array of connections — local, regional, national, global, and they cross racial, ethnic and gender lines. Hence, identities must not be construed as rigid phenomena but rather as being continuously reconstructed, revisioned and reinterpreted in a variety of ways. They are fluid and dynamic, and can fuse or coexist in multiple forms. As they move through a cultural matrix of meanings, they can mediate between the familiar and the strange, between the local and the global, between assimilation and differentiation, to assume new or modify old forms.
Contemporary approaches that explore this process of cultural production have revealed the multiplicity of identities and selves that can exist in a single space or context. Colonies and diasporas, borderlands and pluralistic societies — all offer insightful venues for the study of hybridity. In the contemporary era of migrations, cultural intermixture is quickly becoming an even more notable reality. But history abounds with examples of pluralistic societies where dual or partial identities flourished. Habsburg Empire, Transylvania or the Mexican-American borderlands, the Jewish or Iranian Diasporas in New York City, and the Canadian-Korean or American-African women can reveal much about the discourse of hybrid identities. The aim of the conference is to bring together scholars from across disciplines with a common interest in hybridity to stimulate discussion about how identity is constructed and reconstructed.
Please see the Call for Papers for more information.
If you are planning to attend the conference, please register to help us plan the event and keep you updated.
Sponsors
- utoronto.ca/ceres
- Centre for European Russian and Eurasian Studies at Munk Centre, UofT
- cjs.utoronto.ca
- Centre for Jewish Studies, UofT
- csps.kpk.org/49
- Professor Piotr Wróbel, the Konstanty Reynert Chair of Polish History, UofT
- csps.kpk.org/36
- Professor Tamara Trojanowska, the Polish Language and Literature Program, UofT
- utoronto.ca/slavic
- Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, UofT
- utoronto.ca/cdts
- Centre for Diaspora and Transnational Studies, UofT
- sgs.utoronto.ca
- School of Graduate Studies, UofT
- chass.utoronto.ca/history
- Department of History, UofT
- politics.utoronto.ca
- Department of Political Science, UofT
- anthropology.utoronto.ca
- Department of Anthropology, UofT
- utoronto.ca/jacyk
- Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine, UofT