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Theories of nationalism Week 17 Ethnicity and ‘Race’
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Theories of nationalism

Jan 02, 2016

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Theories of nationalism. Week 17 Ethnicity and ‘Race’. Recap. Considered complexity of concepts Considered the contested nature of the idea of institutional racism. Looked at ‘whiteness’ to explore the relationship between ethnicity and identity. Outline. What is nationalism? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Theories of nationalism

Theories of nationalism

Week 17Ethnicity and ‘Race’

Page 2: Theories of nationalism

Recap

• Considered complexity of concepts

• Considered the contested nature of the idea of institutional racism.

• Looked at ‘whiteness’ to explore the relationship between ethnicity and identity

Page 3: Theories of nationalism

Outline

• What is nationalism?

• Explore Anderson’s theory of ‘imagined communities’

• Look at how nationalism is gendered and the consequences that this has for women in particular

Page 4: Theories of nationalism

• What is Britishness?

• Talk to the person sitting next to you about what you think it is?

Page 5: Theories of nationalism

Definitions of Nationalism

• Nationality is often taken as a given

– Most people have one

– Rarely questioned

– But what are they?

Page 7: Theories of nationalism

Imagined Communities

Anderson suggests that nations are:

– ‘Imagined political communities’

– Imagined as limited and sovereign

– But they usually feel ‘natural’ not chosen

Page 8: Theories of nationalism

Why ‘imagined’

• Most members will not know all the other members

• Yet connections are imagined

• Ideas of common destiny are constructed

• Constructed ideas specific to each ‘nationality’

Page 9: Theories of nationalism

Why limited and sovereign

• Usually associated with an claim for political representation for the collective

• Bounded by other similar constructions and may be developed in opposition

• Often tied geographically

• Nationalists fight to maintain or develop borders rather than for mergence with other nationalities

Page 10: Theories of nationalism

Why community?

• Regardless of inequalities within nations, nation is imagined as ‘comradeship’

• People willing to die to protect this imagining

• But how is it created?

Page 11: Theories of nationalism

Imagined communities?

• Do you think Anderson’s notion of imagined communities is plausible?

Page 12: Theories of nationalism

Cultural Constructions

• For Anderson, the idea of nationalism is created and maintained through symbols and ceremonies of the nation

– Tomb of the Unknown Soldier symbolises unity and national sacrifice (yet nationality unknown)

– Museums, State Occasions, Traditions

Page 13: Theories of nationalism

Symbols of Britishness?

• Patterns of Celebrations?

– State Opening of Parliament– Trooping of the Colour– Remembrance Sunday– Guy Fawkes Night – FA Cup

• Operate both to bind the nation together and re/create image of national identity

Page 14: Theories of nationalism

(Be)Longing

• These imagined communities can be dispersed

• Migrants may ‘belong’ to a Mother Country

• Diaspora may take steps to communicate notions of nationalism

• Nationalism is related to ethnic origin but not reducible to it

Page 15: Theories of nationalism

• In what ways do you think nations control the ‘reproduction’ of themselves?

Page 16: Theories of nationalism

Reproducing the Nation

• Genetic Inheritance often a strong factor in imagined communities– Being born into it, may be the only way in

• Physical reproduction of the nation is through women’s bodies

• Sexuality and reproduction become crucial factors in the reproducing the nation

Page 17: Theories of nationalism

Reproducing the Nation

• Women are both part of the collective and subject to specialist rules

• These often relate to ‘risky’

physical reproduction of the nation

• Behaviour becomes a marker of cultural politics

Page 18: Theories of nationalism

Cultural Imaginings of Gender

• Notions of nations as female (Mother India)

• Women subject to direct controls over sexuality and reproduction

• Women become to symbolic bearers of ‘honour’– ‘Honour’ crimes linked to breaches in

behaviour (extra-marital sex, consulting with the ‘enemy’)

Page 19: Theories of nationalism

Population Agendas

• Women may be required to populate the nation– Bans on contraceptives, abortion– Incentives to bear more children

• Examples include– Awards for ‘heroic mothers’ (Nazi Germany)– Demographic races (Israel/Palestinians)– State demands (‘populate or perish’ Australia)

Page 20: Theories of nationalism

Eugenicist Agenda

• Fixations on the quality rather than quantity of nation’s ‘stock’– State programmes of sterilisation of ‘unfit’

women – Encouragement of contraception for welfare

mothers– Mass rape in war as a strategy of

miscegenation

Page 21: Theories of nationalism

• To what extent do you think that nationalism is gendered?

Page 22: Theories of nationalism

Inclusion/Exclusion

• Nationalist and racist ideologies may be interwoven – Nazi laws –based on how ‘pure blood’ was

contaminated by Jewish Ancestry – US was fixated by measuring extent of

Blackness– Bans on interrelated marriage in Apartheid

South Africa

Page 23: Theories of nationalism

Summary

• Nationalism is a constructed notion of community

• It is (re)produced through symbols and ceremonies of nationhood

• It is gendered and may have particular consequences for women

Page 24: Theories of nationalism

Next week

• Slavery and unfree labour

• Rise of the international slave trade and its ongoing effects

• Modern day forms of forced labour