The mixture of meanings that emerges when two cultures interact; the new forms that are created when cultures merge. ‘Acculturation can be seen as a sort of dialogue between cultures that…engenders the creation of new forms of cultural negotiation which themselves materialize as…hybridity, creoleness and inbetweeness’ (Mitchell (1997) Antipode 29, 2). Identities are not stable, but ambivalent. H. Bhabha (1994) claims that subjects at the margins of cultures, or in a third space, are best placed to resist a domineering culture/narrative, and to create new hybrid forms.