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assimilationism

[ uh-sim-uh-ley-shuh-niz-uhm ]

noun

  1. the practice or policy of assimilating or encouraging the assimilation of people from all ethnic groups and cultures of origin:

    In the 1900s, some immigrants at first resisted the assimilationism of the New World.



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Other yvlog Forms

  • ·i·tDz· noun adjective
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yvlog History and Origins

Origin of assimilationism1

First recorded in 1950–55; assimilation + -ism
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

An engagement with history and the travails of inheritance hovered over this year’s selection with a ghostlike presence, which is no surprise considering the heated state of the country’s various reckonings — with ingrained cultural values about sex and gender that many denounce as patriarchal, for instance, or the clash between the nation’s ideals about assimilationism and its increasingly diverse ethnic makeup.

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Harold demonstrates a strain of WASP-y assimilationism that even his younger relatives can't quite get behind, including insisting that everyone embark on a formal fox hunt and then critiquing Marcus for not having the proper number of buttons on his jacket.

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Today, assimilationism is at the centre of the concept of nation.

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But not all queers were so fervent; many felt marriage amounted to heteronormative assimilationism.

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If you reject “assimilationism,” then you can’t suggest, as Obama did, that centuries of racism have eroded the black nuclear family.

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