Reconstructing Identifications With the Place of Origin in Post-Migrant Communities – the Case of Lower Silesia, Seventy Years After Migration Cover Image

Reconstructing Identifications With the Place of Origin in Post-Migrant Communities – the Case of Lower Silesia, Seventy Years After Migration
Reconstructing Identifications With the Place of Origin in Post-Migrant Communities – the Case of Lower Silesia, Seventy Years After Migration

Author(s): Jacek Kubera
Subject(s): Social history, Post-War period (1950 - 1989), Migration Studies, Inter-Ethnic Relations, Identity of Collectives
Published by: Hrvatsko sociološko društvo
Keywords: post-migrant communities; place identification; place of origin; Polish Western and Northern Territories; Lower Silesia;

Summary/Abstract: As a result of the border shift after the Second World War, people belonging to different national, ethnic, and regional groups settled in Lower Silesia, although Poland was portrayed in propaganda as a mono-ethnic state until the political transformation in 1989. This article examines present types of identification related to the place of origin of the oldest inhabitants of Lower Silesia: persons who were resettled from presentday Belarus and Ukraine, re-emigrants from Bosnia and France, settlers from diverse regions of Central Poland, and deportees from Russia and Kazakhstan. The presence of these identifications in the contemporary public sphere is then discussed. The article’s results are based on computer-assisted qualitative analysis of in-depth, biographically oriented interviews. They show how the social reconstruction of identifications with the place of origin has become institutionalised and examine the treatment of selected once-Polish regional or migratory groups as separate ethnic groups in a multicultural society. The paper demonstrates the distinctiveness of settlers from Central Poland compared to other categories in terms of defining their ties with their place of origin and their visibility in public space.

  • Issue Year: 54/2024
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 7-34
  • Page Count: 28
  • Language: English
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