THE M IN MULTICULTURALISM STANDS FOR MYTH:
THE PERFORMATIVE IDEALIZATION IN CANADA’S MULTICULTURAL POLICIES
By ISABELLA DEL GROSSO published in Volume 6 of Between Arts and Science, Pages 27-30, Published online 2024 Oct 14.
Keywords: Multiculturalism, representation, legislation, inequality, minorities.
ABSTRACT
As described on the Government of Canada’s online database, the Canadian Multiculturalism Act of 1988 is a piece of federal legislation intended to recognize multiculturalism as a fundamental characteristic of Canadian society and to preserve diverse cultural identities (Ministry of Justice, 2014, p. 1). Despite this promise, the Canadian government has failed to adequately recognize the various cultures that have been assimilated and destroyed in the name of preserving the Canadian identity. Further, many of these communities suffer from the results of institutionally constructed hate that has been directed towards them to this day. Examining the origins of Canada as it developed through the lens of Chinese Canadian and Indigenous communities, this paper will examine how assimilation is encouraged for members of these groups and new immigrants in present-day Canada, most notably in Quebec. By looking at the past and present contexts of Indigenous and Chinese Canadian communities as well as assimilation tactics in Quebec that prevent various emerging cultural identities from developing, this paper will argue that multiculturalism is sold as a performative idealization in Canada.
Isabella Del Grosso is currently completing a BA in Sociology, with a minor in Political Science. This paper was written for SOCI380/Race and Ethnic Relations under Professor Jamilah Dei-Sharpe, a PhD candidate at Concordia University.