TY - JOUR
T1 - ‘Jewish Toronto’
T2 - street naming policies and practices in the north of Metropolitan Toronto
AU - Katz, Yossi
AU - Bigon, Liora
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - This article deals with street naming policies and practices with regard to the Jewish urban community in the north of Metropolitan Toronto, Canada. It highlights the linguistic landscape as a cultural and symbolic expression of a Jewish-Israeli minority group in Vaughan, a city in North Toronto. The Jewish nomenclature is also examined viewing Toronto’s multicultural-cum-pragmatic street naming policies. While such a display of Jewish toponymy is almost non-existent in Toronto itself, the creation of ‘Jewish Toronto’ in the north of the metropole is the product of both ‘Jewish’ and ‘Canadian-Torontonian’ factors. This article analyzes these two factors and their related characteristics in terms of demography, sociopolitical approach, religiocultural identity, economy, and municipal by-laws. It concludes that the development of a Jewish toponymic culture as an ethnic-minority culture in the public domain of northern Metropolitan Toronto is a result of a bipartite process. This process has been enabled by the aspirations of the minority group, on the one hand, and the flexibility and tolerance inherent in the multicultural policies of the majority group/ government, on the other.
AB - This article deals with street naming policies and practices with regard to the Jewish urban community in the north of Metropolitan Toronto, Canada. It highlights the linguistic landscape as a cultural and symbolic expression of a Jewish-Israeli minority group in Vaughan, a city in North Toronto. The Jewish nomenclature is also examined viewing Toronto’s multicultural-cum-pragmatic street naming policies. While such a display of Jewish toponymy is almost non-existent in Toronto itself, the creation of ‘Jewish Toronto’ in the north of the metropole is the product of both ‘Jewish’ and ‘Canadian-Torontonian’ factors. This article analyzes these two factors and their related characteristics in terms of demography, sociopolitical approach, religiocultural identity, economy, and municipal by-laws. It concludes that the development of a Jewish toponymic culture as an ethnic-minority culture in the public domain of northern Metropolitan Toronto is a result of a bipartite process. This process has been enabled by the aspirations of the minority group, on the one hand, and the flexibility and tolerance inherent in the multicultural policies of the majority group/ government, on the other.
KW - Hebrew
KW - Jewish minority
KW - Toronto/Vaughan
KW - linguistic landscapes
KW - multiculturalism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85169612399&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.7764/onomazein.60.05
DO - 10.7764/onomazein.60.05
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AN - SCOPUS:85169612399
SN - 0717-1285
SP - 70
EP - 86
JO - Onomazein
JF - Onomazein
IS - 60
ER -