Digital multiculturalism in the Netherlands: Religious, ethnic, and gender positioning by Moroccan-Dutch youth

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Abstract

This article focuses on digital practices of Moroccan-Dutch adolescents in the
Netherlands. The digital sphere is still rather understudied in the Netherlands.
However, it offers a unique, entry to intersecting issues of religiosity, ethnicity and gender as well as to their implications for thinking about multiculturalism from new vantage points. What do digital practices such as online discussion board participation tell us about identity and multiculturalism? The three forms of position acquisition under discussion (gender, religion and ethnic positioning)
show that neither religion, ethnicity, nor gender cease to exist in the digital ealm but are constantly negotiated, reimagined and relocated. Drawing from the work of Modood, Gilroy and other critics of gender, media, multiculturalism and
postcoloniality, we argue that online activities of the Moroccan-Dutch youth not
only offer an important critique of mainstream media debates on multiculturalism, but also create space for alternative bottom-up interpretations
of everyday practices of multiculturalism in the Netherlands
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)150-175
JournalReligion and Gender
Volume2
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 2012

Keywords

  • Digital media
  • online discussion boards
  • Moroccan-Dutch youth
  • intersectionality
  • multiculturalism
  • conviviality

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