Subethnic interpersonal dynamic in diasporic community: a study on Chinese immigrants in Vancouver

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Abstract

Ethnicity is a social construct that can be conceptualised as a social classification delineating certain boundaries between an ethnic group and the dominant group. Members of an ethnic group are assumed to share similar cultural characteristics and to be homogenous among themselves. Many studies in ethnic organisations have indicated that subethnicity also exists within an ethnic group, but research on subethnicity is scant. Based on the findings of an exploratory study conducted in Vancouver, Canada, we examined how, at an interpersonal level, place of origin, language, mutual bias and discrimination and transnational politics divide the Chinese diasporic community subethnically. Meanwhile, being Chinese in the Canadian context and willingness to break the subethnic boundaries are noted as counterforces to the subethnic divide. We contend that interpersonal interaction is an imperative dimension for the understanding of the shaping of boundary between different subethnic groups.

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Yan, M. C., Wong, K. L. Y., & Lai, D. (2019). Subethnic interpersonal dynamic in diasporic community: a study on Chinese immigrants in Vancouver. Asian Ethnicity, 20(4), 451–468. https://doi.org/10.1080/14631369.2019.1613885

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