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Nationalism and National Identities Today: Multidisciplinary Perspectives Re-Conceptualizing the Construction of Nations with Bourdieu‘s Help Marc Helbling University of Surrey, June 13, 2007
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June 13, 2007 / 2 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Aim of this paper Explore what Pierre Bourdieu’s political sociology can contribute to the study of nations and offer a more coherent conceptualization of nations. Explore how his concepts allow us to overcome analytical shortcomings in the study of nations and nationalism.
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June 13, 2007 / 3 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Theoretical under-determination Smith (1998: 223) „[t]he field is so riven by basic disagreements and so divided by rival approaches, each of which addresses only one or other aspect of this vast field, that a unified approach must seem quite unrealistic and any theory merely utopian.“ Malesevic (2004): Durkheim, Marx and Weber did hardly deal with these social phenomena.
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June 13, 2007 / 4 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Definitional proliferation There are almost as many definitions of nationalism as scholars in this field (Smith 1998; Spillman and Faeges 2005) But none of these theories explains them entirely or provides a coherent analytical framework.
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June 13, 2007 / 5 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help What is a nation? Debates between essentialists and constructivists. Almost everybody agrees that nations are socially constructed. But what does this mean? Brubaker (2004): “By virtue of its very success, the constructivist idiom has grown weary, stale, flat and unprofitable.”
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June 13, 2007 / 6 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help What is social constructivism? Instrumentalism? Methodological Idealism? Post-modernism? Too much emphasis of subjectivist aspects! We need an analytical framework that combines objectivist and subjectivist approaches!
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June 13, 2007 / 7 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Classification Struggles I Going beyond the objectivist/subjectivist divide. Classes are not objectively defined and do not automatically gain consciousness. They are the results of ongoing political struggles over how to define them. Contentious nature of group formation.
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June 13, 2007 / 8 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Classification Struggles II Struggles happen in a field of (changing) power relations. Struggles between different visions of the division of the social world. Account for both the individuals (their ideas and their power) AND the social space.
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June 13, 2007 / 9 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help How are nations constructed? The claim that a nation is socially constructed invokes a specific process by which a national self-understanding is produced and reproduced in interaction processes (cf. Fearon and Latin 2000). A nation is such a field in which people confront, in a socially constituted space, their opinions on what constitutes the cultural boundaries (cf. Spillman and Faeges 2005).
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June 13, 2007 / 10 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Culture and Power These definitions do not predefine which categories lie at the basis of a nation; it even leaves open which actors participate in the processes of labeling the nation and which arguments are mobilized. It merely expounds that people incessantly struggle in political processes over the question of who they are and whom they exclude. Accounting for symbolic and material aspects of interactions and thereby going beyond discourse analysis.
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June 13, 2007 / 11 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help The actors‘ perceptions Barth (1969): “[With regard to nations] the features that are taken into account are not the sum of ‘objective’ differences, but only those which actors themselves regard as significant […].” Brubaker (2004): “Nations are not things in the world, but perspectives on the world.”
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June 13, 2007 / 12 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Where do ideas come from? Socialization, education, legitimate symbolic force of the state etc. Danger of social determinism! To apprehend the dynamics of nations consider human beings as both actors and agents. Definitions and ideas might be imposed but they might also be challenged!
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June 13, 2007 / 13 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Habitus A general perception or action-scheme that structures an individual’s reactions to new situations. A toolkit of habits, skills and styles, which are applied in everyday thinking and activities.
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June 13, 2007 / 14 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Processes Nation-states ≠Nationalizing states ≠ Nationalizing nation-states Transformation and fluidity≠developmentalist perspective Account for interactions, power structures and relations between actors.
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June 13, 2007 / 15 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Fields A field of forces and struggles Positions of actors (political capital) Account for the distribution of cultural idioms and discursive frameworks, on the one hand, and power relations, on the other hand.
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June 13, 2007 / 16 Marc Helbling - Re-conceptualizing the construction of nations with Bourdieu‘s help Bourdieu‘s contribution to the study of nations Combine macro- and micro sociological approaches. Going beyond the assertion that nations are constructed by providing instruments to analyze how they are constructed.
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