2020
DOI: 10.1007/s40647-020-00282-7
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Interrogating Naturalness of National Identity

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…A suite of drivers such as socio-economic and political forces went into the construction process, as they served to shape the context within which only certain forms could the national identity take and only certain cultural values could it embody. More importantly, political actors such as social elites, academics, and social movements activists clearly contribute to the setting up of these objectives and directly or indirectly lead the construction of national identity in their desired directions so as to harness the motivational force of a common national identity (Mishra 2020 , p. 333). Democratic participation enables the various political actors mentioned above to influence the construction of a common national identity reflecting their own understanding within a particular spatial–temporal context, while democratic institutions offer them the necessary institutional framework guaranteeing their equal influence over the outcome of the construction process.…”
Section: Towards a Dynamic Account Of The Motivation To Givementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A suite of drivers such as socio-economic and political forces went into the construction process, as they served to shape the context within which only certain forms could the national identity take and only certain cultural values could it embody. More importantly, political actors such as social elites, academics, and social movements activists clearly contribute to the setting up of these objectives and directly or indirectly lead the construction of national identity in their desired directions so as to harness the motivational force of a common national identity (Mishra 2020 , p. 333). Democratic participation enables the various political actors mentioned above to influence the construction of a common national identity reflecting their own understanding within a particular spatial–temporal context, while democratic institutions offer them the necessary institutional framework guaranteeing their equal influence over the outcome of the construction process.…”
Section: Towards a Dynamic Account Of The Motivation To Givementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The presence of a stateless group within a recognized state is constructed as a threat to the dominant national identity. Manoj Kumar Mishra (2020) uses the concept of "self" and "other" to explain the nation-state identity-building process and its consequences, "Naturalization/secularization of the nation-state idea without deliberating on the possibilities of politicization and construction of national identities legitimize exclusion of people from national space, drives toward homogenization and nation-building process producing refugees and stateless people." Stateless groups challenge the dominant narrative used to build the national identity of an established nation-state as it contradicts historical cultural markers, creating binary categorization that becomes the source of conflict.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%