26 messages over 4 pages: 1 2 3 4
Trinigal Newbie Trinidad and Tobago Joined 4478 days ago 1 posts - 1 votes Speaks: English*
| Message 25 of 26 27 August 2012 at 9:25pm | IP Logged |
I am Trinidadian. Mixed ethniciity, but in Trinidad our desciption of people is more of an appearance than actual, ethnic heritage.
Nice to meet the diaspora.
1 person has voted this message useful
| Chung Diglot Senior Member Joined 7159 days ago 4228 posts - 8259 votes 20 sounds Speaks: English*, French Studies: Polish, Slovak, Uzbek, Turkish, Korean, Finnish
| Message 26 of 26 27 August 2012 at 10:13pm | IP Logged |
g0bananas wrote:
Being an Arubian, Chinese-Trinidadian, African-Trinidadian, Russian/Polish-Jewish(ethno-religious
group) American, I have been asked what I am by strangers all my life.
Are there specific terms to explain ones multiracial identity in different languages without having
to explain ones family backround? Is any term or phrase that you have come across that would
translate as the broad term, multi-racial/cultural/ethnic?
If you know the history of the term I'd love to learn about that as well. |
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zenmonkey's suggestion of describing oneself as a mongrel or mutt, would do the job for me.
g0bananas wrote:
I never want to leave any of my cultures behind, but not everyone wants to stick around for an
explanation- especially when I can barely stumble through/recall the pronunciation of the nations my
target languages. Personally, I'd like to know how to explain my ethnicity in Asian languages(mainly
Chinese, Japanese and Korean), for those are my target languages as of now but I'm very curious to
learn how the rest of the world expresses their multiracial identity in their native language.
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Partially because of my studies in foreign languages, I've become so sick of apologetics or chest-thumping arising from geographical accidents for birth or ethnically-based containers (whether one distinguishes "patriotism", "nationalism" and "chauvinism" means little to me as I've found them to reduce to the same mess as the intra-similarities more than offset the intra-differences) that for a while I've been replying: "Does it really matter?" somewhat surily (or even smirking if I'm in a bad mood) when being asked about my ethnicity.
If I were you, I'd just say something like: "My passport and birth certificate indicate that I was born in America, and so I'm American according to some bureaucrat, but you can call me g0bananas. Ummm... What's for dinner?" TS if those asking the question can't reconcile it into some neat nationally/ethnically-derived pigeon-hole.
1 person has voted this message useful
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