Decolonizing the Civic/Ethnic Binary

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Abstract

The founding works of nationalism theory identify two overarching categories of
nationalism: civic and ethnic. While the former is lauded as liberal, inclusive, and
rational, the latter is derided as regressive, restrictive, and exclusionary. More recent work on nationalism has problematized these characterizations, but has largely retained the civic/ethnic binary. This article critiques the civic/ethnic binary from the perspective of postcolonial theory. Drawing on de Sousa Santos’s abyssal line and Fanon’s zones of being and non-being, the article argues that the relationship between metropolis and empire is foundational to the relationship between civic and ethnic nationalism. Yet the category of civic nationalism obscures racialized patterns of exclusion within civic nations, such that the standards of inclusion within a civic nation are constructed on the basis of excluding the nation’s Others. Because civic nationalism is predicated on the
creation and denial of Others, presenting civic nationalism as a global ideal is impossible. The article concludes by considering the promise of transnational social movements in the global South as an answer to both civic and ethnic nationalism.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)347-364
JournalCurrent Sociology
Volume67
Issue number3
Early online date8 Jan 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2019

Keywords

  • abyssal line
  • civic nationalism
  • empire
  • ethnic nationalism
  • postcolonial theory
  • race
  • zone of being
  • zone of non-being

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