1 / 1

 The project title and its content are a work in progress ...

Peter Holley The Nation (Re)Imagined: National Belonging amongst Immigrant ‘Activists’ in Finland and Finnish Expatriates in the UK .

teige
Download Presentation

 The project title and its content are a work in progress ...

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. Peter HolleyThe Nation (Re)Imagined: National Belonging amongst Immigrant ‘Activists’in Finland and Finnish Expatriates in the UK • Aim: To understand how migrants construct an image of a Finnish ‘nation’ and how they position themselves in relation to an imagined Finnish ‘national community’. (Anderson 1991; Billig 1995) • I understand the ‘nation’ (like ethnicity and ‘race’) as a basic unit of social classification. (Brubaker, Loveman & Stamotov2004) • This approach does not uphold (methodological) nationalism’s belief that the social world is “‘naturally’ divided into [national] communities” (Billig 1995: 63). • Rather the ‘nation’ is comprehend as a cognitive category – the ‘nation’ is “fundamentally not a thing in the world, but a perspective on the world.” (Brubaker, Loveman & Stamotov2004: 32. See also DiMaggio 1997) • The following research questions guide my research: • How is the Finnish ‘nation’ constructed by those studied? • And how do those studied position themselves in relation to a perceived Finnish ‘national community’? • Two ethnographic case studies: • Immigrant ‘activists’ in Finland – those active in immigrant NGOs and/or social networks. • Finnish expatriates in the UK – within ‘Finnish’ social networks/cultural institutions. • Dual Migrant Perspective: immigrant ‘activists’ in Finland and Finnish expatriates abroad. • Both ‘groups’ studied present a challenge to homogeneous, territorially bound imaging of the Finnish nation-state. • The first represents the ‘immigrant Other’ within the sovereign borders of the Finnish state, whilst the second symbolizes an extension of the ‘national community’ beyond the state’s territorial limits. • Current status: I am now beginning to collect fieldwork data, tentatively entering the field and continuing to locate/contact potential participants in Finland. The project title and its content are a work in progress... all suggestions for improvement are most welcome! Doctoral Student Department of Social Research (Sociology)/ CEREN, Swedish School of Social Science

More Related