Brampton, Browntown, Or Bramladesh? A Critique of the Hate Speech Used Against Racialized Spaces in Canada

Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Research in Humanities and Social Sciences

Year: 2024

DOI:

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Brampton, Browntown, Or Bramladesh?  A Critique of the Hate Speech Used Against Racialized Spaces in Canada

Jose Benjamin Aspra Rubi

 

ABSTRACT:

This study investigates the online hate narratives around South Asian citizens in Canada. The value of this research is that it challenges the perception of Canadian multiculturalism and by addressing the reality of multiculturalism, it reveals the racial hierarchical structure within ‘equal’ multicultural state like Canada. In this study we connect early 20th century history of recently arrived South Asian migrants to British Columbia to the literature of white nationalism and white fantasy, the myths of multiculturalism and the racist nature of online platforms to expose a shift towards the perspective and acceptance of South Asian people in Canada. Here, the study compiles 120 comments identified as hate speech and organized the comments into categories of general South Asian hate, specific Punjabi hate, specific Indian hate, commentary on social space, insult towards linguistic abilities and claims advocating for deportation from Canada and when relevant, the comments are categorized into subcategories of ‘Becoming India’, white replacement theory and loss of Canadian culture. The results of this coding showcase that the most prevalent narrative found in the YouTube comments were commentary on social space and more precisely commentary on white replacement theory. The implication of this dominant narrative is that it signals to a growing resistance to racialized spaces in Canada. This implication allows for the argument that online platforms such as YouTube should be viewed as an extension to the body of the dominant white nationalist structure in colonial society because these platforms are able to encourage and sustain a white fantasy and white power structures through the platforms structural racist nature that encourage the growth of hate narratives online.

keywords: Cultural studies, Discrimination & Prejudice, Ethnicity, Globalization Impacts, Migration & Immigration, Online Society/Online Community