Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1661Hits:19710121Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID098150
Title ProperLosing the peace
Other Title InformationEuroscepticism and the foundations of contemporary English nationalism
LanguageENG
AuthorWellings, Ben
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Political resistance to European integration in the UK laid important ideological foundations for contemporary English nationalism. The politics surrounding accession to the European Economic Community (EEC) was such that it signalled that accession was a matter of supreme national importance and, via the device of a referendum, it led to the fusing of parliamentary and popular sovereignty. The unfolding of the Thatcherite project in Britain added an individualistic - and eventually an anti-European - dimension to this nascent English nationalism. Resistance to the deepening political and monetary integration of Europe, coupled with the effects of devolution in the UK, led to the emergence of a populist English nationalism, by now fundamentally shaped by opposition to European integration, albeit a nationalism that merged the defence of British and English sovereignty. Underpinning these three developments was a popular version of the past that saw 'Europe' as the ultimate institutional expression of British decline. Thus Euroscepeticism generated the ideology of contemporary English nationalism by legitimising the defence of parliamentary sovereignty through the invocation of popular sovereignty underpinned by reference to the past.
`In' analytical NoteNations and Nationalism Vol. 16, No. 3; Jul 2010: p488-505
Journal SourceNations and Nationalism Vol. 16, No. 3; Jul 2010: p488-505
Key WordsEngland ;  Euroscepticism ;  Nationalism ;  Populism ;  Sovereignty