This paper explores multi-generational shifts in identities and community building among the 'new' African diaspora in Vancouver, Canada. Drawing on interviews with adult migrants from sub-Saharan Africa, teen migrants, and second-generation adults, the paper highlights how diasporic identities are gendered, racialized, and place-based. The first generation struggles to remain African, with men focused more on maintaining links with the homeland and women engaged more with strategies of homemaking in Canada. In contrast, second-generation young men develop stronger affinities with the nearby African-American diaspora, while their sisters are more likely to identify with the local African-Canadian community and, like their parents, to dis-identify with the larger African-American diaspora. © 2014 by Gillian Creese.
CITATION STYLE
Creese, G. (2014). Gender, generation and identities in Vancouver’s African Diaspora. African Diaspora, 6(2), 155–178. https://doi.org/10.1163/18725457-12341245
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