Europe has become a novel experiment in multiple, tiered and mediated multiculturalisms. It is now a supranational community of cultures, sub-cultures and trans-cultures inserted differentially into radically different political cultural traditions. The consequences of this re-imagining and re-making of a new Europe are variously seen to be threatening or utopian. In a post-Communist, post-national era, multiculturalism has been theorized as a paternalistic, top-down solution to the ‘problem’ of minorities, a dangerous reification of ‘culture’, or a new way forward to a politics of ‘recognition’ and ‘authenticity’. But is multiculturalism simply a novel project of social engineering, devised for the twenty-first century by well-meaning liberals or communitarians? The authors of this book reject this view by demonstrating that multiculturalism is the political outcome of ongoing power struggles and collective negotiations of cultural, ethnic and racial differences.
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Is multiculturism simply a novel project of social engineering? This book rejects this view by demonstrating that multiculturalism is the political outcome of ongoing power struggles and collective negotiations of cultural, ethnic and racial differences.
Read more
  • Introduction - The Politics of Multiculturalism in the New Europe
  • 1. Globalisation and the Discourse of Otherness in the "New" Eastern and Central Europe
  • 2. The 'Invaders', 'Traitors' and the 'Resistance Movement' - The Extreme Right's Conceptualisation of Opponents and Self in Scandinavia
  • 3. International Migration in Europe - Social Projects and Political Cultures
  • 4. The Perils of Ethnic Associational Life in Europe - Turkish Migrants in Germany and France
  • 5. Negotiating Religious Difference - The Opinions and Attitudes of Islamic Associations in France
  • 6. Arenas of Ethnic Negotiation - Cooperation and Conflict in Bradford
  • 7. Islam as a Civil Religion - Political Culture, Education and the Organisation of Diversity in Germany
  • 8. Hyphenated Identities and the Limits of Culture
  • 9. Defining Ethnicity - Another Way of Being British
  • 10. Why 'Positive Action' is 'Politically correct
  • 11. Society as a Kind of Community - Communitarian Voting with Equal Rights for Individuals in the European Union
  • 12. Reflections on Multiculturalism in Britain
  • 13. Afterword - Writing Multiculturalism and Politics in the New Europe.
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Is multiculturism simply a novel project of social engineering? This book rejects this view by demonstrating that multiculturalism is the political outcome of ongoing power struggles and collective negotiations of cultural, ethnic and racial differences.
Read more

Product details

ISBN
9781856494229
Published
1997-08-01
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Age
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
288

Biographical note

Tariq Modood is professor of sociology, politics and public policy, and founding director of the Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship at the University of Bristol, UK.