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Published byJanice Pitts Modified over 9 years ago
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Who are you?
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Identity and Politics
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What is Identity? Identity can be defined as “a sense of separate and unique selfhood”…… –How people see themselves Determined by a network of social and other relationships which differentiate people from people Identity is a broad concept based on gender, ethnicity, religion, citizenship, etc….
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Identity in Western Societies Refers to exercising choice-eg. Lifestyle choice Implies difference
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What is Identity Politics? Identity politics calls for full and formal recognition of the difference – Adapting and even celebrating it –Calls for a shift from universalism to particularism Recognition of a significant cultural difference within the society Also called politics of difference Identity links the personal to the social Sees the individual as embedded in a particular cultural, social, institutional and ideological context ( Heywood 2007: 212).
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Origin of Identity Politics? Post colonial theories Emerged from the collapse of the European empires during the early post-1945 period (Heywood 2007: 212).
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Core Feature Challenged to overturn the cultural dimension of imperial rule by establishing the legitimacy of non-western and sometimes anti western political ideas and traditions Edward Said critiqued Eurocentrism through his notion of “orientalism”….. “ belittled and demeaned” non-western people and culture – Eg. “mysterious East, “instructable Chinese” and “Lustful Turks” ( Heywood 2007: 212). Rise of Black consciousness movement in 1960s in the USA Growing political assertiveness, expressed through ethnic nationalism of cultural groups in various parts of the world determines identity politics (ibid.: 212).
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Identity Politics in Sri Lanka Sinhalese and Tamil identity politics Historical claims constructed IDP, contested and evolved into cultural contestation, cultural contestation transformed into ethnic conflict Political parties were formed on ethnic lines –Tamil Rule Party or Freedom Party and Sri Lanka Freedom Party ( SLFP) Ethnic nationalism was introduced into politics –Stress on Sinhalese consciousness - Buddhism and language –Take power from English educated, urban elite and the idea of building Sinhala nation through the villages Ethnic conflict becomes separate nationalism Sought to seek separate homeland for Tamils (Eller 2002: 126).
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Identity Politics in Sri Lanka- Contd. Citizenship Act No.18 of 1948- September 21, 1948 established criteria for citizenship that most Indian Tamils could not meet –Individual born before October 15 1948 required two generations of Sri Lankan descent The compulsory study of Sinhala language at the secondary school level Bandaranaike’s Sinhalese nationalist government built politics on the basis Sinhala culture Sinhala made official language through the Official Language Act, No 33 of 1956 Sinhalese peasants resettlement in thinly populated land of that Tamils considered their own (Eller 2002: 124-129).
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