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CULTURAL HYBRIDITY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   099847


Untangling the different components of Norwegianness / Vassenden, Anders   Journal Article
Vassenden, Anders Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract National identity is under scrutiny in Europe. A new non-ethnic conception of the nation to replace the traditional ethnic one is needed. National identity is therefore undergoing a public reconstruction. This article is based on narratives of "Norwegianness" that emerged in a qualitative interview study of white majority Norwegians who live in multicultural suburbs in Oslo. I respond to an overlooked need to analytically untangle different components of "Norwegianness" as phenomenological knowledge, to decouple its different constituents from each other. In order to analyse qualitative data where notions of "Norwegianness" and "non-Norwegianness" are at play, their different aspects must be clarified. I identify multiple discursive oppositions that researchers ought to keep apart, and distinguish between civic aspects (citizenship), cultural aspects, and ethnic/racial aspects. I suggest that everyday notions of the national are fruitfully studied as discursive space constituted by a series of overlapping, but sometimes mutually contradicting, oppositions.
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2
ID:   129471


War by other means: cultural policy and the politics of corporate consociation in Bosnia and Herzegovina / Fontana, Giuditta   Journal Article
Fontana, Giuditta Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Civil war obliterates memories of past coexistence. Yet, memories can also be erased through peacetime denial of legitimacy and funding to institutions preserving artifacts and remains testifying to a past of cultural hybridity. This article examines the interplay between cultural policy and constitutional framework in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) to explain the recent closure of Sarajevo's museums. It argues that the institutions' demise reflects a new state-building project founded on the separate development of mutually exclusive cultural and ethnic communities. Amnesia about past coexistence is instrumental to the political stability of BiH's corporate consociation but may hamper long-term conflict resolution.
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