爱尔兰的“种族”、民族和归属感

Jonathan Mitchell
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引用次数: 8

摘要

尽管人们一直在努力抵制那些导致种族歧视的态度和做法,但大多数被认为是现代西方国家仍在经历种族歧视的具体影响。这篇文章认为,国籍太容易与“种族”或民族混为一谈,以至于在特定地理边界内的所有人中都表现出一种表面上的本质或给予性。有人认为恰恰相反,通常所理解的国籍并没有什么自然之处;既然如此,它必须通过社会、语言和物质实践不断得到支持和重建。对于西方的现代国家来说,这通常意味着对非国民和非白人的“他者”进行标记或识别——种族化。内部/外部的逻辑包含了国家的概念,其中这样的他者是“构成外部”,无形地澄清和加强了内部人的地位。于是,国家通过明确地认同和贬低它所不是的东西,默认地断言和珍视它自己假定的品质。有人认为,这种逻辑不利于开放,而开放可能会在“国内”人和新来者之间建立同情和同理心的关系。本文首先概述了它的理论立场:国家是一个通过不断(重新)铭文的不平等权力关系维持的“虚构的种族”,国家及其“人民”是没有原始本体论地位的杂交体。它总结了北爱尔兰和爱尔兰两国民族认同的历史宪法。最后,它考虑了爱尔兰岛上三个“他者”群体的经历,即犹太人、旅行者和寻求庇护者,以及这种“他者”如何被表现出来,以加强国家的认同。这种关于民族的观念及其所规定的排斥贯穿始终,其结论是,任何旨在消除机构和个人种族主义的政策,无论多么善意,最终都将失败,除非重新思考民族本身- -以及它所构成的身份- -。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
'Race', Nation and Belonging in Ireland
Despite consistent efforts to counteract those attitudes and practices that give rise to it, most putatively modern Western nations continue to experience the concrete effects of racial discrimination. This essay argues that nationality is all too easily conflated with ‘race’ or ethnicity, such that a seeming essence or givenness is manifested amongst all those within a particular geographic boundary. It is suggested that on the contrary, there is nothing natural about nationality as commonly understood; this being so, it must be continually shored up and reconstituted through social, linguistic and material practices. For modern nations in the West, this has often entailed the marking or identification - racialisation - of non-nationals and non-white ‘Others’. A logic of inside/outside subtends the concept of nation wherein such Others are the ‘constitutive outside’ that invisibly clarifies and reinforces the status of those within. Nation, then, tacitly asserts and valorises its own putative qualities through the explicit identification and denigration of what it is not . It is argued that such a logic militates against the openness that might ground compassionate and empathetic relations between those ‘inside’ the nation and its new arrivals. This article first outlines its theoretical position: that nation is a ‘fictive ethnicity’ maintained through the continual (re)inscription of unequal power relations, and that nations and their ‘people’ are hybridities without originary ontological status. It summarises thereafter the historic constitution of national identities within both Northern Ireland and Ireland. Finally, it considers the experience of three groups of ‘Others’ on the island of Ireland, namely Jews, Travellers and asylum seekers, and how such Otherness has been represented in order to bolster the identity of the nation. This idea of nation and the exclusions it instates are interrogated throughout, with the conclusion that any policies aimed at eliminating institutional and individual racism, however well-meant, will ultimately fall short until nation itself - and the identities it is involved in constituting - are rethought.
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