Abstract
Questions of hybridity and multiple identities are over-theorised but the number of
empirical studies is limited. The present study examines some of the discursive devices
used in two Polish Tatar magazines for managing narratives about their national, ethnic
and religious identities. The Polish Tatars are a numerically small group that have lived
for more than 600 years in Catholic Poland. For them, being a Tatar, Muslim and Pole at
the same time, is central to their self-understanding, and they do not want to limit the
importance of any of these. Two main strategies of narrative identity management were
identified, related to identity definitions and identity connections. The former gives
layered understandings about Polish Tatar identity: a factual one in which a local and
historical connection is made and a spiritual one in which belonging to an imagined
symbolic community is stressed. The latter provides reconciliation between identities by
stressing their similarities and relations, by emphasizing the contributions made by
Tatars to Polish society, and by presenting the Tatars as potentially being in a unique
mediating position between Islam and Christianity. In the near future, Tatars’ strategies
for creating a hybrid identity might be challenged by global and more local developments.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 77 |
| Number of pages | 1 |
| Journal | National Identities |
| Volume | 8 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2006 |
Keywords
- Narrative
- Multiple Identities
- Hybridity
- Polish Tatars