The Waterloo Centre for German Studies at the University of Waterloo, Ontario Canada, through multiple interviews and analyses, presents the historical and modern aspects of the German-speaking people of the region.
"The desire to have both roots and wings is consistent with many immigrants' descriptions of their own cultural identities, which are often difficult to define in such stark terms as I-am-German, or I-am-Canadian. Identity can only be defined through the relationship between the remembrance of the old and the experience of the new."
Alissa Melitzer, Paul Malone and Nataa Nuhanovic.
EDITORS
Mathias Schulze, Professor of German and European Studies, San Diego State University
Grit Liebscher, Professor of Applied Linguistics, University of Waterloo
Sebastian Siebel-Achenbach, Lecturer in Interaction Design and Business, University of Waterloo
Waterloo Centre for German Studies (WCGS)
Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies
University of Waterloo
Ontario Canada
"The desire to have both roots and wings is consistent with many immigrants' descriptions of their own cultural identities, which are often difficult to define in such stark terms as I-am-German, or I-am-Canadian. Identity can only be defined through the relationship between the remembrance of the old and the experience of the new."
Alissa Melitzer, Paul Malone and Nataa Nuhanovic.
EDITORS
Mathias Schulze, Professor of German and European Studies, San Diego State University
Grit Liebscher, Professor of Applied Linguistics, University of Waterloo
Sebastian Siebel-Achenbach, Lecturer in Interaction Design and Business, University of Waterloo
Waterloo Centre for German Studies (WCGS)
Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies
University of Waterloo
Ontario Canada
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