Résumés
Abstract
This paper examines the transformational possibilities of educational curriculum design in fostering interrelational solidarities among mature migrant and diaspora women. It offers a brief introduction to an emerging doctoral project that engages with the educational experiences of mature migrant and diaspora women in Canada. Throughout a migrant woman’s displacement and “settlement” journey, friendships emerge as a starting point through which some women start to construct their agentic selves within and outside their homes, partners, and diasporic community. These friendships allow for a transnational self to emerge, one that can move beyond identification as the primary location for struggle, and towards shared, but different, experiences of oppression. By resisting neoliberal and multicultural immigration policies that isolate mature immigrant women and reproduce violence, these connections, communities, and friendships push settlement education systems to reckon with complicated, yet symbiotic experiences of migrant and diaspora women.
Keywords:
- educational curriculum design,
- transnational feminism,
- settlement education,
- diaspora studies,
- migration
Résumé
Cet article examine les possibilités transformationnelles dans la conception de programmes d’enseignement pour favoriser une solidarité interrelationnelle entre les femmes d’âge mûr immigrées et de diaspora. Il présente brièvement un projet de doctorat en cours d’élaboration qui porte sur les expériences d’éducation des femmes d’âge mûr immigrées et de diaspora au Canada. Tout au long du voyage de déplacement et d’“établissement à l’étranger” d’une femme migrante, les amitiés apparaissent comme point de départ par lequel certaines femmes commencent à construire leur moi agentique au sein de et en dehors de leur foyer, de leur couple et de leur communauté diasporique. Ces amitiés permettent l’émergence d’un moi transnational, capable d’aller au-delà de l’identification comme lieu principal de lutte et de la prise de conscience à des expériences d’oppression communes, mais différentes. En résistant aux politiques d’immigration néolibérales et multiculturelles qui isolent les femmes immigrées d’âge mûr et qui reproduisent la violence, ces liens, ces communautés et ces amitiés poussent les systèmes d’éducations basés sur les communautés immigrantes (settlement-based education) à tenir en compte les expériences compliquées mais symbiotiques des femmes migrantes et de diaspora.
Mots-clés :
- conception de programmes d’éducation,
- féminisme transnational,
- éducation basée sur les communautés immigrantes,
- études de la diaspora,
- migration
Parties annexes
Bibliography
- Alexander, S. A. J. (2011). M/othering the nation: Women’s bodies as nationalist trope in Edwidge Danticat’s ‘Breath, eyes, memory.’ African American Review 44(3), pp. 373–390.
- Cvetkovich, A. (2012). Depression: A public feeling. Duke University Press.
- Freire, P. (2000). Pedagogy of freedom: Ethics, democracy, and civic courage. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
- Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada (IRCC). (2021, September). Settlement outcomes highlights report. https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/news/2021/07/irccs-first-settlement-outcomes-highlights-report-provides-insight-on-the-path-to-success-for-newcomers-in-canada.html
- Jensen, J. (2009). Knowledge in the blood: Confronting race and the apartheid past. Stanford University Press.
- Migrant Integration Policy Index. (2020). Canada: MIPEX 2020. https://www.mipex.eu/canada
- Ndhlovu, F. (2016). A decolonial critique of diaspora identity theories and the notion of superdiversity. Diaspora Studies, 9(1), 28–40.
- Philipupillai, Gillian G. (2013). The marking of Tamil youth as terrorists and the making of Canada as a White settler society [Master’s thesis, University of Toronto. Toronto, Canada]. https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/bitstream/1807/42640/1/Philipupillai_Gillian_G_MA_thesis.pdf
- Razack, S. (1998). Looking White people in the eye: Gender, race, and culture in courtrooms and classrooms. University of Toronto Press.
- Shan, H. (2015). Settlement services in the training and education of immigrants: Toward a participatory mode of governance. New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2015(146), 19–28.
- Shan, H., & Walter, P. (2015). Growing everyday multiculturalism: Practice-based learning of Chinese immigrants through community gardens in Canada. Adult Education Quarterly, 65(1), 19–34.
- Simpson, J. S., James, C. E. & Mack, J. (2011). Multiculturalism, colonialism and racialization: Conceptual starting points. Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies 33(4), 285–305.
- St. Denis, V. (2011). Silencing aboriginal curricular content and perspectives through multiculturalism: “There are other children here.” Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies, 33(4), 306–317.
- Thobani, S. (2007). Exalted subjects: Studies in the making of race and nation in Canada. University of Toronto Press.
- Zhu, Y. (2016). Immigration policy, settlement service, and immigrant mothers in neoliberal Canada: A feminist analysis. Canadian Ethnic Studies 48(2), pp. 143–156.