Abstract

The cultural drives in the Antillese population in continental France have switched, in step with migration dynamics, in direction and target: they focus less than in the past on the future of the ‘native lands’ and more on improved integration in the host country. But in such a situation, facing racism, Antillese peoples in France are paradoxically reduced to emphasizing their collective identity, notably through associations, to obtain recognition from the host society’s institutions and achieve social advancement within that society. A recognition of the diversity and complexity of the cultural dynamics in question should lead to break with any essentialist thinking and, then, to reappraise many of the ideas that are at the heart of the discussions inspired by those dynamics, notably the idea of diaspora.

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