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Publication

Complicating cosmopolitanism

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Subtitle:ethno-cultural and sexual connections among gay migrants
Contemporary migrants are described as connected migrants, as they maintain multiple connections using digital and social media. This paper explores how this leads to processes of cosmopolitanism and/or encapsulation in a particular group, voluntary gay migrants in Belgium, focusing on the intersection between ethno-cultural and sexual identifications and connections. Drawing on in-depth interviews, the cosmopolitan outlook of the participants becomes clear, as their national and ethno-cultural connections are relatively weak while they identify more strongly with cosmopolitan LGBTQ culture. However, while more salient, sexuality is not all-defining either, bespeaking their rather privileged position as a group of migrants who are self-dependent and not strongly encapsulated in ethno-cultural nor sexual communities, neither minority identity causing excessive stigmatization. As a consequence, they use digital and social media to simultaneously connect to different social spheres, although most do manage their self-presentation to avoid the clash or 'collapse' of different social contexts online.
Journal: Popular communication
ISSN: 1540-5702
Volume: 16
Pages: 32 - 44
Publication year:2018
BOF-keylabel:yes