Title: European identity European Societies
1European identityEuropean Societies
- After Wallace
- November 2012
2European identity v. national and regional
identity
- National identity and nationalism
- How do we account for national identity?
- Different types of national identity in Europe
- European identity, is it the same as national
identity?
3What is Nationalism?
- Nationalists argue that nations are timeless
phenomena. When man climbed out of the primordial
slime, he immediately set about creating nations.
- The next major school of thought is that of the
perennialists who argue that nations have been
around for a very long time, though they take
different shapes at different points in history. - While postmodernists and Marxists also play in
the larger debates surrounding this topic, the
modernisation school is perhaps the most
prevalent scholarly argument at the moment. These
scholars see nations as entirely modern and
constructed.
4Construction of Nations
- Similar to ethnicity and race, nations are
- socially constructed entities, and are not
- natural and stable.
- How do people construct a nationalistic
- identity?
5Three Phases in the rise of Nationalism
- End of 19th Century. from period of 1848
uprisings against the Habsburg Empire. Break-up
of the Habsburg Empire into many small
nation-states (principle of "self-determination").
Completed after end of WWI. Unification of Italy
and Germany - End of British Empire after WWII. Rise of new
states in Africa and Asia in 1950s and 1960s - Break-up of USSR. Re-emergence of older
countries Czech Republic, Poland, Georgia,
Armenia, Baltic States, and creation of new ones
Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Slovakia, Kazakhstan,
Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia.
6Nationalism Debates
- Ernest Gellner nationalism is a modern
phenomenon. Based on idea that cultural/ ethnic
community and territory should be congruent in
form of a state. Created by elites. Education
system essential. - Anthony Smith nationalism based also on older
cultural/ethnic groupings "primordial". - Hobsbawm/Anderson nation is an "imagined
community" (post-modernist).
7Thought and Change, Ernest Gellner, 1964
- "Nationalism is not the awakening of nations to
self-consciousness it invents nations where they
do not exist, but it does need some pre-existing
differentiating marks to work on, even if...
these are purely negative".
8"Gastronomy or geology?...",Anthony D. Smith,
1994
- "Nationalists have a vital role to play in the
construction of nations... as political
archaeologists rediscovering and re-interpreting
the communal past in order to regenerate the
community. Their task is indeed selective, they
forget as well as remember the past..."
9Imagined Communities, Benedict Anderson, 1983
- "It is imagined because the members of even the
smallest nation will never know most of their
fellow-members, meet them, or even hear of them,
yet in the minds of each lives the image of their
communion... The nation is imagined as limited
because even the largest of them, encompassing
perhaps a billion human beings, has finite, if
elastic boundaries, beyond which lie other
nations. No nation imagines itself coterminous
with mankind... It is imagined as sovereign
because the concept was born in an age in which
Enlightenment and Revolution were destroying the
legitimacy of the divinely-ordained, hierarchical
dynastic realm".
10Different types of nationalism
- Civic nationalism associated with membership of
a particular nation and community of citizens
(from French Revolution) (possible basis of
European identity) Habermas "constitutional
patriotism" - Ethnic nationalism based on cultural and/or
linguistic Ethnic communities become political
communities. Often in revolt against alien
rulers. - (not possible basis of European identity because
no common language and culture)
11Four time zones of Europe
- After Gellner
- Brideculture
- GroomPolitical movement or state
- 1. Western Seaboard strong dynastic states that
unified national territory from middle ages
onwards. The state existed before the nation.
Nationalism was a "present of history". Language
and culture already present. - Bride and groom had been cohabiting before
marriage
12Four time zones... cont.
- 2. Central time zone High cultures existed
(Italian and German) but fragmented political
states. Need to create states under a common
cultural roof. Unified in the 19th century. - Bride was waiting for groom to appear
13Four time zones... cont.
- 3. Central-East time zone mixture of many small
ethnic and cultural groups. Ethnic groups mainly
peasant cultures with no literate tradition.
Nationalism began with ethnography
(descriptive/normative) folklorists, school
teachers, Awakeners at end of 19th century and
beginning of 20th century. But difficult to build
a territory. People had to be assimilated,
expelled or killed. - Groom had to be created and bride had to be
found.
14Four time zones... cont.
- 4. Eastern Tsarist Empire became Soviet Empire.
Controlled territories forcefully and
incorporated models of ethnic nations. But
collapse meant rise of new nationalisms. - Harem model.
15European identities Three theories (Spohn)
- 1. European identity a weak addendum to National
identity - 2. In the long-run European identity will replace
national identity - 3. People will hold both identities
16Identification with Europe
17European identity as cosmopolitan identity
- According to Delanty, European identity is a
cosmopolitan conception, unlike monolithic
national identity - Identities can be multiple, overlapping, nested,
cross-cutting, mixed, hybrid, co-existing - We can have a number of identities simultaneously
- Assumes variety and plurality of tongues and
peoples and cultures - Ethnic, regional, and national identities relate
in different ways - European identity contained in national identity
- Flux and change is normal
18European identity as cosmopolitan... cont.
- Can it replace national identity? According to
Habermas it needs late modern society to be
well-developed. - In post-national society identity not based on
territory, or culture, or state. Reflexive and
critical influence of modern culture. Late
modernity/post modernity
19Problems with cosmopolitan concepts of European
Identity
- Not all countries can be described as
"post-modern", multiple modernities - Nationalist backlash against cosmopolitanism/Eur
opeanisation - Limits of constructivism
- Increasingly Anglo-centric
- Lack of passion?
20Bases of European identity
- Civilisational/historical (WW2, Romans)
- Economic instrumentalism
- Integrationist
- Civic identity/ civic patriotism (not ethnic),
but lack of civic engagement with EU - Symbols/Ritual
- State building, increasing powers
- Elite project (so was national identity)
- Sites/heroes (Monnet, Schumann)
- Construction of "the Other", is it strong
enough? Anti-war? Anti-Muslim (but Bosnia)?
Anti-American?
21Bases of European identity, cont.
- Convergence family and class, work and mass
consumption, the European city, the welfare state - Education system missing dimension
- Culture but no common language
- Loyalty missing due to lack of trust and
community and legitimacy - Democracy/Modernisation
- But according to Delanty, a post-national
loyalty is gradually emerging, thin kind of
loyalty. Reflexive loyalty and solidarity.
22European values
- Social justice
- Welfare
- Environmentalism
- European capitalism? Scandinavian model?
- Collective identity relative to the EU
- Thin and thick identities
- Thick identity (comprehensive) ethnic/racial
tie that organises a great deal of social life
and both individual and collective action - Thin identity (less comprehensive)
ethnic/racial tie that organises relatively
little of social life and action.
23European identities Modern marriage?
- Many strong and competing brides
- Weak groom
24Readings
- Delanty, G., Is There A European Identity?
Global Dialogue, 534, Summer/Autumn 2003 - Delanty, G., Models Of European Identity,
Perspectives on European Politics and Society,
(2002) 33, 345-359 - Smith, A. D., National identity and the idea of
European Unity, International Affairs. 1992.
681, 55-76 - Spohn, W., The Role of Collective Identities in
the Eastern Extension of European Integration,
2002 - Walkenhorst H., The Conceptual Spectrum Of
European Identity, Limerick Papers in Politics
and Public Administration, 2009, No.3