PODCAST · society
The Modern Migrant
by The Modern Migrant
A show about the inner life of migration: the emotional, cultural, and intellectual work of building a life between worlds. It explores what migration does to identity; how it stretches, fragments, and reshapes who you are over time. Beyond borders, labels, and definitions, it focuses on the experience from the inside, the subtle shifts that influence how you see yourself and where you belong. At its core is the Identity Gap: the space between who you were, who you’ve become, and the self you are still integrating. It’s where adaptation stops being temporary and starts shaping who you are.
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The Good Immigrant Script: When Belonging Becomes Performance
What happens when belonging is not given… but earned?In this episode of The Modern Migrant, Katrina explores what she calls the Good Immigrant Script; an unspoken system where acceptance is shaped by behaviour, tone, and how closely you align with what is expected.Not something you are told.Something you learn.Over time, adaptation becomes strategy. Strategy becomes habit.And habit becomes identity.This is where the Identity Gap begins to widen the space between who you are, and who you’ve learned to be in order to move through the world.Through personal reflection and philosophical insight, this episode explores:Why belonging often becomes conditional rather than neutralHow performance is rewarded and quietly internalisedWhat happens when identity is shaped under expectation, not expressionFeaturing insights from:Nikesh Shukla: on conditional acceptance and cultural legitimacy ( The Good Immigrant)Dina Nayeri: on the expectation of gratitude as proof of worth ( The Ungrateful Refugee) Julia Kristeva: on the “foreigner within” and identity in transitThis episode is not about rejecting adaptation. It’s about recognising it.Because when you can see the script, you can begin to question it.
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The Borrowed Gaze: When Other People’s Judgment Becomes Your Inner Voice
At some point, the voice in your head stops being entirely yours.It becomes shaped by something else.Not imposed. Not forced.But absorbed, repeated, and eventually… believed.This is where the Identity Gap begins to widen.In this episode, I introduce the Borrowed Gaze the moment external perception stops being something you notice, and starts becoming the way you see yourself.It begins with what I call the First Mirror Moment: a subtle shift where you realise you are no longer just living you are being interpreted.From there, something changes. Awareness becomes internal.Internalisation becomes automatic.And over time, you stop asking: Who am I? And start adjusting to: How am I being seen?This is not a single moment. It’s a process:Awareness → Internalisation → AutomationAnd inside that process, the Identity Gap quietly expands between who you are, who you’ve learned to perform, and who you haven’t fully reclaimed yet.This episode draws on the work of W. E. B. Du Bois, Frantz Fanon, and Michel Foucault not as theory, but as language for something deeply lived: the experience of seeing yourself through more than one lens, and slowly forgetting which one was yours to begin with.Follow The Modern Migrant for future episodes exploring the Identity Gap and life between worlds.Subscribe to our SubStack newsletter
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The fragmented identity: Why Migrants Feel at Home Everywhere and Nowhere
What happens when identity is no longer tied to one place?In this first episode of The Modern Migrant, Katrina explores fragmented identity, the often invisible experience of becoming different versions of yourself across cultures, contexts, and expectations.From code-switching and adaptation to the quiet feeling of not fully belonging anywhere, this episode gives language to something many people live but rarely name.Through reflection, cultural references, and contemporary art, we explore:Why identity begins to feel divided when you live across worldsHow adaptation shapes who you becomeWhy fragmentation is not failure but evidence of a life lived across multiple realitiesFeaturing insights from artists and film that capture the emotional and structural reality of living “in-between.”This episode isn’t about fixing identity. It’s about seeing it more clearly.Because sometimes the shift is simple: realising it was never just you.Artists:Aziza Kadyri — Play Nice (Somerset House Studios)Madeleina Kay — visual art & political identity workFilms:Atlantics — directed by Mati DiopMinari — directed by Lee Isaac ChungConceptual Framework:Homi K. Bhabha — The Location of Culture (Third Space / “in-betweenness”)Subscribe to our SubStack newsletter
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The Manifesto - The Modern Migrant: Between Identities By Design
In this manifesto of The Modern Migrant, Katrina introduces the idea at the centre of the series:Migration doesn’t just change where you live. It changes how you experience yourself.This is where the Identity Gap begins, the space between who you were, who you’ve become, and the version of you still trying to make sense of both.Migration is often discussed in terms of movement, policy, or opportunity.But the deeper shift is internal.What happens when you are seen before you are understood?When you start adjusting your voice, your behaviour, your presence without fully realising it?This episode explores the quiet mechanics of that transformation, the moments where identity is negotiated in a glance, a silence, a conversation and the invisible work of translating yourself across contexts.Part personal reflection, part framework, this opening episode is a manifesto for the series:A space to name what is usually left unspoken and to make sense of the experience of living between versions of yourself.If you’ve ever felt the distance between who you are and who the world seems to see, you’re already inside the Identity Gap.Welcome to The Modern Migrant.Subscribe to the Modern Migrant newsletter on Substack.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
A show about the inner life of migration: the emotional, cultural, and intellectual work of building a life between worlds. It explores what migration does to identity; how it stretches, fragments, and reshapes who you are over time. Beyond borders, labels, and definitions, it focuses on the experience from the inside, the subtle shifts that influence how you see yourself and where you belong. At its core is the Identity Gap: the space between who you were, who you’ve become, and the self you are still integrating. It’s where adaptation stops being temporary and starts shaping who you are.
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The Modern Migrant
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