
Journal of Multicultural Discourses
Editor Shi-xu Zhejiang University, China Reviews Editors: Doreen Wu, Polytechnic University of Hong Kong, China Sharon Harvey, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand

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Volume: 2 Number: 2 Page: 131147
doi:10.2167/md073.0
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The Role of Discourse in Identity Formation and the Manufacture of Ethnic Minorities in Zimbabwe
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Finex Ndhlovu
School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
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The notion of ethnic minorities is a highly contested subject that cannot be fully explained in terms of demographic facts alone as it is indexically linked to struggles over sociopolitical power, cultural domination and control. Ethnic minorities have to be conceptualised as fluid and transitory phenomena mediated and reconstituted by various forms of discursive practices. Drawing on primary and secondary data collected in Zimbabwe, this paper problematises the role of discourse in the manufacture of ethnic minorities for purposes of social exclusion and other related forms of discrimination. Chief among the discourses of constructing ethnic minorities considered in this paper are the following: discursive practices underwriting the hegemony of dominating ethnic groups; the use of languages as prime markers of ethnic and national identity; as well as the appropriation and abuse of terminology such as minority and majority in pursuit of exclusionary political agendas.
Keywords: discursive constructs, identity formation, ethnicity, language politics, language marginalisation
© 2007 F. Ndhlovu


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