Adeyanju, Charles. “Hegemony and Transnational Practices of Nigerian-Yorubas in Toronto”. Irinkerindo: A Journal of African Migration, no. 2, 2003, https://scholar2.islandarchives.ca/islandora/object/ir%3A687.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Adeyanju, Charles
Date Issued
2003
Abstract

This paper discusses transnational practices of Nigerian-Yoruba immigrants in Toronto. It is argued that Yoruba transnational practices stem from their 'lived experience' of exclusionary practices & their material positions in Canadian society, & their pre-existing conception of 'ethnicity' as 'real' in postcolonial Nigerian society. Using the Gramscian notion of hegemony, it is pointed out that the reaffirmation & reconfiguration of unequal social relations within the Yoruba transnational social fields has some materiality in the sense that it taps into what Gramsci calls 'feeling passion' -- the moment where Yoruba individuals' understandings of their social position emotionally & normatively resonate with their lived experiential consciousness/common sense. Further, the paper argues that diverse discourses & ideologies focusing on 'ethnicity'/ 'race' are articulated by the dominant members of both host & home societies to 'naturalize' & 'normalize' the existing unequal social relations. A grassroots approach for the displacement of continued racial, gender, & class inequalities adumbrated by the existing transnational activities is necessary. 1 Figure, 68 References. Adapted from the source document.

Note

Source type: Electronic(1)

http://search.proquest.com/docview/60542623?accountid=14670

Language

  • English
Host Title
Irinkerindo: A Journal of African Migration
Issue
2
ISSN
1540-7497