Equality as sameness Anthropological perspectives on the Norwegian society.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Disjunction Phenomenon in the European Union. Christiane Villain-Gandossi & Jan Berting.
Advertisements

Kant’s Ethical Theory.
Aspects of Culture.
Government – Chapter 1.3 Lecture
Cultural Dynamics in Assessing Global Markets
Assumptions of the Economic Model
Lecture 5. Political Culture and Political Socialization
Equality as sameness Anthropological perspectives on the Norwegian society Thorgeir Kolshus, Department of social anthropology.
4 - 1 Chapter Learning Objectives The importance of culture to an international marketer The origins and elements of culture The impact of cultural borrowing.
Understanding Diversity In The Workplace
Caste, race, ethnicity, nationality Are cultural inventions designed to create boundaries around one or another imagined community. Are cultural inventions.
The Langue/Parole distinction`
Health Systems and the Cycle of Health System Reform
Types of Economy Command Market Mixed Traditional.
Theories of Development. Cognitive Development Early psychologists believed that children were not capable of meaningful thought and that there actions.
Democracy What is Democracy?.
A gateway to the theoretical universe of vision and design A gateway to the theoretical universe of vision and design.
1 Economic System Dr. Kazi Shahdat Kabir
Communicative Language Teaching (CLT)
Class 11 The Self CA 2018 Consumer Insight A.Kwanta Sirivajjanangkul
Chapter 1 Notes. As American citizens, we make a commitment to the nation and to the values and principles that are part of the United States democracy.
Presentation of Sport wills (Idrotten vill) Sports movement’s policy program Agreed by the 2009 AGM of the Swedish Sports Confederation.
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Presented by:- Shreshtha Midha & Shanky Sidana
The leaders personal characteristics Leadership style Situational influence Social interaction – the importance of delegation and communication.
Chapter VII: Gender and Development
Intro to Government in America Sawyers – AP Government.
What is Culture?.
Attitude You learn to behave in a particular way to a particular object in a particular situation. A learned predisposition to behave in a consistently.
B 203: Qualitative Research Techniques Interpretivism Symbolic Interaction Hermeneutics.
COMPARATIVE MANAGEMENT ISSUES. Macro/Micro Issues MACRO ISSUES Industrialization Level Economic system Political History and System Regional Integration.
Cognition and Behaviour Cognition is the way we obtain, process and use information from the world around us It helps us make sense of things and allows.
Christiane Eilders Prof. of Communicaton Studies, U of Augsburg First Sino-German Symposium on Knowledge Handling: Representation, Management and Personalized.
Comparing Political Systems. Why Compare To develop perspective on the mix of constants and variability which characterize the world’s governments and.
Policies for ageing societies: Some Challenges relevant to the East Asian Dimension.
Community and family cultural assessment Lecture Clinical Application for Community Health Nursing (NUR 417)
Political Culture. Warm Up Reading on podium Reading on podium Which position do you find more persuasive? Why? Which position do you find more persuasive?
Literacy and Life Skills in Prison – Hamburg 1-4 June Dr. Christine Tuschinsky I N T E R K U L T U R E L L E O R I E N T I E R U N G U N D D I V.
  Poverty is a situation or way of life that arises as a result of the inability to access or lack of resources to meet basic human needs physical and.
Introduction to Political Philosophy What is politics, what is philosophy, what is political philosophy and intro to the state of nature.
Objectives of Public Finance Allocation of Resources Promotion of Distributional Justice Removal of Distortions in the Economy Capital Formation and Economic.
Three Modern Approaches. Introduction Rawls, Nozick, and MacIntyre Rawls, Nozick, and MacIntyre Have significant new approaches Have significant new approaches.
Dimensions of Culture.
1. Max Weber and the Theory of Bureaucracy The term bureaucracy was coined by German sociologist Max Weber. Bureaucracy refers to complex organizations.
Intro to Government in America Sawyers – AP Government.
The Self Solomon, bamossy (2010). The self defined A relatively new concept that regards people and their relationship to society. Self-concept, strictly.
Hofstede Five Cultural Dimensions Dimensions. Hofstede’s Cultural Framework 1.Power Distance 2.Individualism vs. Collectivism 3.Masculinity vs. Femininity.
Unit 9/Week 9 – PP 101 Instructor Flentroy-Parker.
Topic 9 Korean Foodways. Gimchi: origin & change A kind of acid fermented vegetable Gimchi, Chinese paocai, Japanese tsukemono, Chinese origin theory:
Why Democracy?. What are the Challenges of decision making? School boards should be allowed to decide what students wear to school School boards should.
Sociological Foundations I: What is Sociology? September 18 th, 2012.
Week 4 Material Culture and Human Behavior Principles of Archaeology Chuntaek Seong Kyung Hee University.
Habermas and the Frankfurt School
What is Culture? The set of beliefs, values practices that a group of people have in common.
Please take out your openers & your 1.3 Study Guides
Week One: Overview and Definitions
NORINT0500 Norwegian Life and Society Norwegian Culture and Identity or Equality as Sameness? Jon Henrik Ziegler Remme
Norwegian Culture and Identity: Equality as Sameness?
C H A P T E R 1 Principles of Government
Last lesson… Social Class and the Underclass
Week One: Overview and Definitions
Chapter 10 - Global Inequality
Chapter 2 Culture!!!!!!1.
Diversity and Equity In A Global Era
Norwegian Culture and Identity: Equality as Sameness?
Sociology: A Unique Way to View the World
Justice, equity and marketisation in/of education: concluding comments
Test review-evolution
Fusion Food “Fusion at its best allows ingredients from all over the globe to be marinated, cooked and served together harmony on the same plate.” Peter.
Presentation transcript:

Equality as sameness Anthropological perspectives on the Norwegian society

An anthropological perspective implies: trying to see phenomena as they appear from the native’s point of view portraying lifeworlds in a way that makes them probable. «If I were born and bread here, I would share those ideas, ideals and goals» but also, to assume the outsider’s stance, and actively compare the particular features of the society in question with other sociocultural systems, in order to identify the human commonalities obscured by the particularities

Learning objective:

But first, a native’s view – possibly ironic mSHM mSHM

Gate-keeping concepts Key notions that cannot be ignored when studying an ethnographic region Examples: Gift-giving in Melanesia The caste system in South Asia For the Nordic countries:

Equality as sameness This entails: People who eat, drink, consume and act more or less the same are also believed to share the same values and therefore consider themselves, and are considered by others, as equals in a more fundamental sense In Norden, there is a passion for equality

The flip side of this coin 1 People who appear/are regarded as different are excluded from certain informal social arenas 2 Hierarchical elements and tendencies remain concealed, as they are willfully subdued, and situations in which there could be conflicting values are avoided, which leads to: 3 The key narrative of Norwegian cultural homogeneity is rarely challenged

The sad tale of the original Norwegian flag carrier

Competitor SAS Introduced the concept of Business Class, to replace First Class on European and intercontinental flights No-class system within the Nordic countries Still: Braathens had 70% of the lucrative Norwegian market “Svensk Alt Sammen” vs The Norwegian Flag Carrier But then …

Recipe for bankruptcy, Norwegian style BEST Reintroduced the curtain Food, newspapers, coffee adjusted to human tastebuds’ adaption to alteration in air pressure BACK (not ‘bak’, but still) No frills Food available for purchase, at a fraction of the extra ticket cost

And the consequence … Three years later, Braathens’ entire assets were acquired by SAS

What made this such a disastrous miscalculation of the market? Conspicuous consumption is rare: nobody would like to publicly display their lack of economic savvy But, more critical: BACK equals “standing with your cap in your hand” (å stå med lua i handa) Norwegians bow to no-one who believes himself entitled to a bow – and by not bowing, we confirm our equality (key Norwegian courtesy code!) The Norwegian flag carrier lost every legitimacy for ignoring these crucial aspects of Norwegian mentality

Billionaire in windbreaker – he’s an Equal. And what does he have for lunch?

The matpakke We are what we eat – the same Pietism and efficiency

24 million annually …

The changing ethnicity of the Folkepizza Marianne E. Lien Marketing and Modernity Oxford: Berg : Italian (imagined cuisines: all pizzas are Italian) Late 80s: American pizza (crust too thick to pass as Italian) Early 1990s → The Norwegian Pizza 370 million in 30 years

No dissin’ the taste of the Equals boiAnRM boiAnRM

And if you do … The label ‘elitist’ is imminent Elitists are simply not Equals Writer Nikolaj Frobenius: “In our minds, the welfare state is all-inclusive to such an extent that the possiblity of falling on the side of society simply does not exist. The position of the outsider is consequently a matter of elitist choice, not of disfranchisment.”

We, the State State religiosity: The eschatological dimension of government The state as guarantor for equality, rendering the Norwegian democracy its particular flavor. Sweden and Norway: Unparalleled trust in the UN and other “faceless” bureaucratic bodies Long-term experience of a benevolent state, which wishes well and indiscriminately fulfils its purpose to the betterment of society and consequently the individual This is the paradox of Norwegian collective individualism

Consequences Tax evasion is no sport We have trouble conceiving the reality of self-serving bureaucracies – i.e. an inability to realise that governments also are cultural products We believe in our own myths – for instance the UN Human Development Index Complete faith in the state’s ability to deliver the perfectly fair and non-discriminatory society “… in 2011, in the world’s richest country” A schizophrenic combination of universalism (our model fits the world) and exceptionalism (we have no equal under the sun)

Culture and logical scandals Cultures are not seamless entities: Contradictions flourish But, what appears from the outside as inconsistencies and logical scandals, is not necessarily experienced as such

Norwegian monarchy, a logical scandal? Privelege by birth, in a fiercely egalitarian meritocracy, with little tolerance for hierarchies Louis Dumont’s theory of encompassment and the hierarchy of values

Equality as overarching value As long as we and they do, consume and wear the same, we are all equals The royal family is the symbolic embodiment of this key principle King Olav on the tram to Frognerseteren vs the scandal of “Johnny from Stovner”

It’s not who you are, but how you are

But then… King Harald’s coup d’etat in 2008 Virtually uncommented in Norwegian media Could this be the straw that broke the camel’s back – rather than the angel business of Princess Martha Louise and the pre-nuptial promiscuity of the coming queen?