SoSe 22: Civic Identity in Europe
Bujar Aruqaj
Comments
The rise of support for right-wing political actors is often viewed as a threat and an indicator of a return to national identification. David Easton on the other hand defines “support for the political community” as the diffuse support for the political authorities or regime which typically express itself in the form of trust or confidence in them. However, for the political community the same kind of diffuse attitudes may appear as a sense of we-feeling, common consciousness or group identification (Easton 1953, 391; 1975). Thus, more practically civic identity is best understood as a set of beliefs and emotions about oneself as a participant in civic life (Knefelkamp 2008, 6). It refers to a broader sense of developing and situating oneself and one’s beliefs within a group of people, and how one engages with others in the social, political, and economic structures within their society.
In the first part of this course we will assess the values, norms, and practices conducive to civic identity and engagement as a comparative aspect of European societies. We will further review the literature on competing explanations of identity formation such as primordialism, instrumentalism, constructivism, and the literature on symbolic boundaries (Lamont and Molnár 2002). In the second part we will inspect more recent “nation building” projects in the post-socialist societies of Eastern and Southeastern Europe specifically. We will assess to what extent these societies were able to reconstruct, structure or “reimagine” their national identity (Andersen 1991). Further, we will take a critical look at so-called “nation branding” campaigns where societies are often articulated as post-ethnic, cosmopolitan, entrepreneurial national subjects, while disregarding real social divisions on the ground (Kaneva 2017; 2018). We will explore the challenges of fostering common civic identification in “deeply divided” societies (Guelke 2012). In the final part of the course, we will address the potential and problematic of digital and social media which have arguably fundamentally altered the civic landscape, and creating opportunities for civic engagement as well as distinct challenges (James and Lee 2017; Viola 2020). close
12 Class schedule
Regular appointments