Preservation of ethnic identity among Slovenian emigrants in the era of globalization
Abstract
Slovenian ethnic territory has suffered a very high level of emigration during the last two centuries. Slovenians emigrated as economic emigrants mostly to the USA, in the first half of the 19th century also to Argentina, Brazil, Egypt, Belgium and some other developed European countries. In the mid 1920's a large number of Slovenians escaped (mostly to Argentina) from the growing fascist pressure in the region which at that time was under the Italian government. After World War Two, there was an important flow of political refugees from communism who escaped mostly to Argentina, the USA, Canada and Australia, and in different periods from the 1960's to 1980's a large number of typically economic emigrants left for Germany, Sweden, Switzerland, France, Belgium and some other countries. It has been estimated that close to 500,000 Slovenians have emigrated from the Slovenian ethnic territory in the recent past, and this number is a “fifth quarter” of today's 2 million Slovenians living in Slovenia.
In their efforts to preserve their original ethnic identity, Slovenian emigrants established hundreds of ethnic societies and associations. In the course of time, the first generations of immigrants passed away, and the second, third and already the fourth generations are doing their best to cultivate close ties with their roots and keep in touch with the homeland of their ancestors.
The level of the preservation of their ethnic roots has depended on different multicultural policies in individual countries, and also on the attitude of the Slovenian (Yugoslav) political order towards them. After the independence and international recognition of the Republic of Slovenia, the Slovenian identity in the Diaspora raised significantly. Many of those who had always found it difficult to identify with Yugoslavia (which was a centralist multiethnic state), began to identify with Slovenia at that time. Suddenly a significant number of new emigrant societies appeared, the number of emigrants’ visits to Slovenia increased, etc. On the other hand, the Republic of Slovenia also introduced a new policy towards Slovenians abroad. A ministry – later changed into an office – for Slovenians abroad was established, and new systematic models of financial and other support to Slovenians in the Diaspora came into practice.
Globalization itself is not a threat to the ethnic identity of Slovenians abroad. As a process of an advanced technology it has brought many benefits to the relations between Slovenia and its countrymen living abroad, and this is becoming increasingly evident in recent years. Slovenian associations, societies and individuals abroad are using the Internet as the most convenient means of overcoming two major factors of their separation from their motherland: the distance, and – for younger generations – the language. The speed and the global access of modern communication seem to provide a sufficient substitute for a physical contact. The lingual assimilation and consequently the language barrier between the emigrants and their relatives in Slovenia are becoming less and less problematic, and the era of globalization is bringing similar values and codes of communication to all youngsters around the world.
Downloads
References
Barfield, Thomas (ed.). 1997. The Dictionary of Anthropology. Oxford: Blackwell.
Barnard, Alan; Jonathan Spencer (ed.). 1998. Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology. London: Routledge.
Corsellis, John. 1997. The Slovene Political Emigration 1945-1950. Dve domovini/Two Homelands, No. 8, pp. 131-159.
Dey, Ian. 1993. Qualitative data analysis. London, New York: Routledge.
Jevnikar, Martin. 1996. Slovenski domovi v Južni Ameriki. Dve domovini/Two Home lands, No. 7, pp. 97-112.
Južnič, Stane. 1987. Antropologija. Ljubljana: DZS.
Klemenčič, Matjaž. 1992. Reactions of Slovenian and Croatian immigrants, American press, and American scientists to events in Slovenia and in Croatia in the period from 25 June 1991 till the recognition of Slovenia bythe United States. In: Izseljen ski koledar 1993. Ljubljana: SIM.
Klemenčič, Matjaž. 1995. Slovenes of Cleveland. Novo mesto: Dolenjska založba.
Lewelen, Ted C. 1992. PoliticalAnthropology: An Introduction. Westport, Connecticut; London: Bergin&Garvey.
Rant, Jože (ed.). 1998. Zbornik dela v zvestobi in ljubezni: Zedinjena Slovenija 1948 1998. Buenos Aires: Association Zedinjena Slovenija.
Rant, Pedro. 1959. La Inmigracion Eslavena enArgentina (doctoral dissertation). UBA, Facultad de Ciencias Economicas. Buenos Aires.
Russell, Bernard H. 1991. Research Methods in CiilturalAnthropology. Newbury Park, London, New Delhi: Sage Publications.
Svobodna Slovenija, weekly. Svobodna Slovenija, Zedinjena Slovenija. Buenos Aires.
Velikonja, Jože. 1985. Las comunidades eslovenas en el Gran BuenosAires. In: Estudios migratiros latinoamericanos, No. 1. Buenos Aires: CEMLA.
Žigon, Zvone. 1996. Funkcionalni bilingvizem in Slovenci v Argentini in Urugvaju. Dve domovinilTwo Homelands, No. 7, pp. 71-95.
— 1998. Otroci dveh domovin (Children of Two Homelands). Ljubljana: Založba ZRC.
—1999. Slovene Political Emigration in Argentina: Its Identity 50 Years ago and Todday. Paper on the 34* World Congress of the International Institute ofSociology; Multiple Modernities in an Era of Globalization, Tel Aviv, Israel, July 1999.
—2001. Iz spomina v prihodnost (From memory to the future). Ljubljana: Založba ZRC.
—2002. Vloga Slovencev v tujini pri osamosvojitvi. In: Slovenska osamosvojitev 1991, Brežice, zbornik s simpozija. Ljubljana: DZ RS, Zveza zgodovinskih društev Slovenije, pp. 188-189.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Authors guarantee that the work is their own original creation and does not infringe any statutory or common-law copyright or any proprietary right of any third party. In case of claims by third parties, authors commit their self to defend the interests of the publisher, and shall cover any potential costs.
More in: Submission chapter