“Identity is not as transparent or unproblematic as we think. Perhaps instead of thinking of identity as an already accomplished fact... we should think, instead, of identity as a ‘production’.” — Stuart Hall, “Cultural Identity and Diaspora” (1990)
The Myth of a Stable Self
In a culture obsessed with self-definition—whether via Myers-Briggs types, astrology, aesthetics, or bio lines—identity often feels like something we’re supposed to discover and display. But what if identity isn’t something found, but something forged? Not fixed, but always unfinished?
Stuart Hall’s contribution to thinking about identity is radical in its simplicity: identity is not essence. It’s a process. A narrative. A becoming. And this idea, drawn from his poststructuralist and postcolonial commitments, unsettles both the essentialist view of identity (that we each have a singular, true self) and the consumerist one (that identity is a curated brand).
Instead, identity, for Hall, is shaped through difference—always in relation to others, to history, and to representation. We are not who we are because of some inner core, but because of how we are positioned within and against the symbolic systems around us.
Identity as a Story We Tell (And Retell)
Hall makes a critical distinction between two ways of thinking about cultural identity. In “Cultural Identity and Diaspora”, he contrasts:
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The essentialist view, which sees identity as a shared cultural essence—often rooted in tradition, nation, or ancestry.
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The positional view, which understands identity as historically situated, constructed through difference, and always evolving.
Hall leans decisively toward the latter. He draws from thinkers like Frantz Fanon and Michel Foucault to emphasize how power, discourse, and history shape not just what we can be, but what we can imagine being. For diasporic or postcolonial subjects, especially, identity isn’t a return to origins—it’s a negotiation of fragments.
This doesn’t mean identity is fake. It means it’s political.
From Fixed Labels to Fluid Selves
Hall’s theory speaks loudly in an era of plural, intersectional identities. Online, we are constantly asked to define ourselves: our pronouns, our politics, our playlists. And yet, even as categories proliferate, so too does the anxiety: What happens when we no longer fit neatly?
Hall anticipated this. He argued that the modern subject is increasingly fragmented—not as a crisis to be resolved, but as a condition to be understood. Our identities are formed at the crossroads of language, image, and ideology. We are always translating ourselves—between worlds, cultures, and platforms.
That’s not necessarily a loss. It’s a space of possibility.
Diaspora as Metaphor—and Method
Hall’s Caribbean heritage and diasporic experience were not incidental to his theory—they were its starting point. His writing on “new ethnicities” and diasporic identities offers a model for thinking beyond binaries like Black/white, colonizer/colonized, self/other.
In diaspora, identity becomes a process of articulation—a term Hall borrowed from Althusser but repurposed to mean both connection and expression. Diasporic identity is not about purity or authenticity but hybridity, contradiction, and reinvention.
This has major implications for how we understand identity politics today. Rather than seeking purity or consensus, Hall invites us to stay with complexity. To understand solidarity not as sameness, but as alliance across difference.
Why It Still Matters
In a digital landscape saturated with identity discourse, Hall’s approach reminds us that identity is not a conclusion—it’s an unfolding. It’s the work of positioning, resisting, and reimagining ourselves in systems that often seek to define us for us.
When identity becomes a product (a bio, a brand, a box to tick), we lose sight of its deeper function: as a site of struggle, memory, and transformation. Hall offers no easy answers—only the conviction that who we are is something we make, together, in context, and never alone.