1 / 26

Equality as sameness

Equality as sameness. Anthropological perspectives on the Norwegian society. An anthropological perspective implies :. t rying to see phenomena as they appear from the native’s point of view

tracy
Download Presentation

Equality as sameness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Equality as sameness Anthropologicalperspectives on the Norwegian society

  2. An anthropologicalperspectiveimplies: • trying to see phenomena as theyappear from thenative’s point ofview • portrayinglifeworlds in a waythat makes them probable. «If I wereborn and breadhere, I wouldsharethoseideas, ideals and goals» • butalso, to assumetheoutsider’sstance, and activelycomparetheparticularfeaturesofthesociety in questionwithothersociocultural systems, in order to identifythe human commonalitiesobscured by theparticularities

  3. Learning objective:

  4. But first, a native’sview – possiblyironic • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ebqdwQzmSHM

  5. Gate-keepingconcepts • Key notionsthatcannot be ignoredwhenstudying an ethnographic region • Examples: • Gift-giving in Melanesia • The caste system in South Asia • For the Nordic countries:

  6. Equality as sameness • This entails: • People whoeat, drink, consume and act more or less the same arealsobelieved to sharethe same values and thereforeconsiderthemselves, and areconsidered by others, as equalsin a more fundamental sense • In Norden, there is a passion for equality

  7. The flip side ofthiscoin 1 People who appear/are regarded as different are excluded from certain informal social arenas 2 Hierarchical elements and tendencies remain concealed, as they are willfully subdued, and situations in which there could be conflicting values are avoided, which leads to: 3 The key narrative of Norwegian cultural homogeneity is rarely challenged

  8. The sad tale oftheoriginal Norwegian flagcarrier

  9. Competitor SAS • Introduced the concept of Business Class, to replace First Class on European and intercontinentalflights • No-class system withinthe Nordic countries • Still: Braathens had 70% ofthelucrative Norwegian market • “Svensk Alt Sammen” vs The Norwegian Flag Carrier • Butthen …

  10. Recipe for bankruptcy, Norwegian style • BEST • Reintroducedthecurtain • Food, newspapers, coffeeadjusted to human tastebuds’ adaption to alteration in air pressure • BACK (not ‘bak’, but still) • No frills • Food available for purchase, at a fractionoftheextraticketcost

  11. And theconsequence … • Three years later, Braathens’ entire assets wereacquired by SAS

  12. Whatmadethissuch a disastrousmiscalculationofthe market? • Conspicuousconsumption is rare: nobodywould like to publicly display theirlackofeconomicsavvy • But, more critical: BACK equals “standing with your cap in your hand” (å stå med lua i handa) • Norwegians bow to no-one whobelieveshimselfentitled to a bow – and by not bowing, weconfirmourequality (key Norwegian courtesycode!) • The Norwegian flagcarrier lost everylegitimacy for ignoringthesecrucialaspectsof Norwegian mentality

  13. Billionaire in windbreaker– he’s an Equal. And whatdoes he have for lunch?

  14. The matpakke • Wearewhatweeat – the same • Pietismand efficiency

  15. 24 million annually …

  16. The changingethnicityofthe Folkepizza • Marianne E. Lien Marketing and Modernity Oxford: Berg 1997 • 1980: Italian (imaginedcuisines: all pizzas areItalian) • Late 80s: American pizza (crusttoothick to pass as Italian) • Early 1990s → The Norwegian Pizza • 370 million in 30 years

  17. No dissin’ the taste ofthe Equals • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIb-boiAnRM

  18. And if you do … • The label ‘elitist’ is imminent • Elitistsaresimply not Equals • Writer NikolajFrobenius: “In our minds, the welfare state is all-inclusive to such an extent that the possiblity of falling on the side of society simply does not exist. The position of the outsider is consequently a matter of elitist choice, not of disfranchisment.”

  19. We, the State • State religiosity: The eschatological dimension ofgovernment • The state as guarantor for equality, rendering the Norwegian democracy its particular flavor. • Sweden and Norway: Unparalleled trust in the UN and other “faceless” bureaucratic bodies • Long-term experience of a benevolent state, which wishes well and indiscriminately fulfils its purpose to the betterment of society and consequently the individual • This is theparadoxof Norwegian collectiveindividualism

  20. Consequences • Taxevasion is nosport • We have trouble conceivingtherealityofself-serving bureaucracies– i.e. an inability to realisethatgovernmentsalsoarecultural products • Webelieve in ourownmyths – for instancethe UN Human Development Index • Complete faith in thestate’sability to delivertheperfectly fair and non-discriminatory society • “… in 2011, in the world’s richest country” • A schizophrenic combination of universalism (our model fits the world) and exceptionalism(we have no equal under the sun)

  21. Culture and logical scandals • Cultures are not seamless entities: Contradictions flourish • But, what appears from the outside as inconsistencies and logical scandals, is not necessarily experienced as such

  22. Norwegian monarchy, a logical scandal? • Privelegeby birth, in a fiercelyegalitarianmeritocracy, with little tolerance for hierarchies • Louis Dumont’s theory of encompassment and the hierarchy of values

  23. Equality as overarchingvalue • As long as we and they do, consume and wear the same, we are all equals • The royal family is the symbolic embodiment of this key principle • King Olav on the tram to Frognerseterenvs the scandal of “Johnny from Stovner”

  24. It’s not whoyouare, buthowyouare

  25. But then… • King Harald’s coup d’etat in 2008 • Virtually uncommented in Norwegian media • Could this be the straw that broke the camel’s back – rather than the angel business of Princess Martha Louise and the pre-nuptial promiscuity of the coming queen?

More Related