From I to we: participants’ accounts of the development and impact of shared identity at large-scale displays of Irish national identity

IF 0.8 4区 社会学 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE
D. Blaylock, Clifford Stevenson, Aisling T. O’Donnell, S. Reicher, Dominic Bryan, F. Neville, O. Muldoon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT In Ireland, ritual events and parades have been a central part of civic and public life. However, there is limited understanding of the identity processes at work at these collective events. The present research aims to examine how participants attending collective events come to recognise shared social identification and the impact that this awareness is reported to have on intragroup processes. Interview data were collected over the course of two years at the St Patrick’s Day parade and 1916 Easter Rising commemorations in Dublin and Belfast with both participants and attendees at the events. Thematic analysis revealed that to the extent that individuals saw the event as an identity event, they used attendance as their primary indication of shared identity, along with visual identity markers, shared experiences, and shared affects. Participants’ accounts of the experience of shared identity focused upon a range of cognitive, affective, and social variables which together suggested a relational transformation in the crowd. These findings suggest that shared identity is an emergent state which plays a critical role in transforming social relations within the collective.
从我到我们:参与者对爱尔兰民族身份大规模展示中共同身份的发展和影响的描述
摘要在爱尔兰,宗教仪式和游行一直是公民和公共生活的核心部分。然而,人们对这些集体活动中的身份过程了解有限。本研究旨在检验参加集体活动的参与者如何认识到共同的社会认同,以及据报道这种意识对群体内部过程的影响。采访数据是在两年的圣帕特里克节游行和1916年都柏林和贝尔法斯特复活节起义纪念活动中收集的,参与者和与会者都参加了这些活动。专题分析显示,在某种程度上,个人将该活动视为一种身份事件,他们将出席人数作为共同身份的主要指标,以及视觉身份标记、共同经历和共同影响。参与者对共同身份体验的描述集中在一系列认知、情感和社会变量上,这些变量共同表明了人群中的关系转变。这些发现表明,共同身份是一种新兴状态,在改变集体内的社会关系方面发挥着关键作用。
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来源期刊
Irish Political Studies
Irish Political Studies POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
28.60%
发文量
34
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