B2: Remembering and Practising Diversity in a Post-Multi-Ethnic City

Dr. Piotr Goldstein (ZOiS)
Sign over a small restaurant at Kapani Market in Thessaloniki, with words in Ladino and Turkish, Thessaloniki, Greece, 2022. (c) Piotr Goldstein

Description

Łódź throughout the ninetieth century rose from a small town to one of the fastest demographically developing cities in the world, one that had no ethnic majority but similarly sized German, Jewish and Polish populations. Thessaloniki, has long been an international symbol of diversity and cosmopolitanism. For big part of its history the city had a Sephardic-Jewish majority and considerable Turkish, Slavic-speaking and Greek populations.

Both cities changed from truly cosmopolitan to practically mono-ethnic throughout the twentieth century, primarily because of wars, expulsions, and migrations. Now, at the beginning of the twenty-first century, because of new wars and new migrations, both again become more diverse – ethnically, culturally, and linguistically. In Lodz where at the beginning of the twentieth century one could see shop-signs in German, Yiddish, Polish and Russian, today multilingual, mostly Ukrainian, and Russian signs, make their (re)entry into the public space. In Thessaloniki, new migrants, mostly from Africa and the Middle East change the soundscape of the city.

Working with the elderly, the activists who cherish multi-ethnic past in their work, remaining minorities, and new migrants, this project explore ways in which the bygone diversity is being remembered, the new one is practised, and the links between the two are drawn. The project uses visual and sensory ethnography to engage directly and dialogue with its key protagonists and other stakeholders of the change.

Key questions

  • How is the multi-ethnic conviviality remembered when ethnic diversity decreases?
  • What is the importance of personal, generational, and historical legacies of social engagement for that memory?
  • How do the (few) members of ethnic minorities and the new migrants now present in the post-multi-ethnic cities affirm their citizenship through everyday practices of social engagement?
  • What is the meaning and (practical) value of ‘old diversities’ for these new migrants?

Methodology and sources

  • Ethnography
  • Visual and sensory ethnography
  • Interviews

Project team

Dr. Piotr Goldstein

Piotr Goldstein is a social scientist. At ZOiS, he works in the team of the MOBILISE project, which aims to understand why in times of crisis some people protest while others migrate.

Piotr  Goldstein holds a master’s in International Peace Work from the University of Trieste as well as in Philosophy from the University of Lodz. He received his PhD from the University of Manchester working at the intersection of social anthropology, sociology and political science. Before joining ZOiS in June 2019, he held a Thomas Brown Assistant Professorship at Trinity College Dublin and a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Manchester. During his fellowship, he researched various forms of donor-independent, informal, everyday activism, conducting fieldwork in Novi Sad (Serbia), Debrecen (Hungary), Lodz (Poland), Cádiz (Spain) and Manchester (UK). He is also a recipient of a Leverhulme/British Academy Small Research Grant, thanks to which he co-produced a 30-minute ethnographic documentary entitled  ‘Active (citizen)’.

CV Piotr Goldstein

Dr. Piotr Goldstein

Piotr Goldstein is a social scientist. At ZOiS, he works in the team of the MOBILISE project, which aims to understand why in times of crisis some people protest while others migrate.

Piotr  Goldstein holds a master’s in International Peace Work from the University of Trieste as well as in Philosophy from the University of Lodz. He received his PhD from the University of Manchester working at the intersection of social anthropology, sociology and political science. Before joining ZOiS in June 2019, he held a Thomas Brown Assistant Professorship at Trinity College Dublin and a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Manchester. During his fellowship, he researched various forms of donor-independent, informal, everyday activism, conducting fieldwork in Novi Sad (Serbia), Debrecen (Hungary), Lodz (Poland), Cádiz (Spain) and Manchester (UK). He is also a recipient of a Leverhulme/British Academy Small Research Grant, thanks to which he co-produced a 30-minute ethnographic documentary entitled  ‘Active (citizen)’.

CV Piotr Goldstein

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