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Power, Habitus and National Character: The Figurational Dynamics of Brexit

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posted on 2020-03-24, 09:21 authored by Michael J. Dunning, Jason Hughes
»Macht, Habitus und Nationalcharakter: Die Figurations-Dynamik des Brexits«. Most explanations that have sought to understand the “causes” of Brexit have tended to focus on the idea of a “left-behind” white working class who were exercising a protest against a liberal elite. Other approaches have cit-ed the roles played by a broader demographic in Britain, or have identified “cleavages” between “nationalist” and “cosmopolitan” normative codes. Howev-er, such approaches typically fail to address the complexities of longer-term social processes which have been fundamental to Brexit. The analytical models used to explain these cleavages have tended to conceptualise the relationships between the two codes as irreconcilable opposites, rather than as shifting bal-ances in the context of changing social conditions. In this paper, we focus upon understanding Brexit as part of a set of longer-term developments in human figurations involving moves towards greater integration with concurrent coun-tervailing disintegrative pressures. These shifting patterns of integration and disintegration involve changes of habitus, balances of power (such as function-al democratisation), and expanding and retracting spans of emotional identifi-cation. The relationship these processes have to early nation-state formation in Europe are critical, exposing how the dualisms in national codes have been fundamental to the formation of national identities since the Renaissance. Our central argument is developments in these areas of human interdependence have contributed to recent centripetal shifts towards more nationalistic norma-tive codes, and the resulting cleavages being witnessed in Europe, the United States, and indeed, across the world. We explore these shifting relational dy-namics and show how a longer-term developmental approach helps to move the debate beyond present-centred and static considerations.

History

Citation

Historical Social Research 45 (1): 262-291. doi: 10.12759/hsr.45.2020.1.262-291.

Author affiliation

School of Media, Communication and Sociology.

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Historical Social Research

Volume

45

Issue

1

Pagination

262-291

Publisher

University of Cologne

issn

0172-6404

Copyright date

2020

Publisher version

https://www.gesis.org/hsr/abstr/45-1/11dunning-hughes

Language

en

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