Private sentiment and public issues Irish medium education and complex linguistic and political Identification
Date
2012Author
Warren, Simon
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Recommended Citation
Warren, S. (2012) 'Private Sentiment and Public Issues Irish Medium Education and Complex Linguistic and Political Identifi cation' In: Angela Pilch Ortega, Barbara Schröttner(Eds.). Transnational Spaces and Regional Localization Social Networks, Border Regions and Local-Global Relations. Munster, Germany : Waxman.
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Abstract
Is it possible to construct a non-essentialist politics of place?
This is a central question explored in this chapter. The empirical focus of the chapter is the
cultural politics of language surrounding the Irish-medium education policy of
a secondary school in an Irish-speaking region of Ireland. The primary objective of the chapter is the
development of a theoretical framework for thinking through the possibility of
a non-essentialist politics of place.
The chapter is organised around three related theoretical discussions of
space/place, social/political and public/private. Identity (of place and politics) is seen as
formed at the intersection of history, economics, culture and politics
producing contingent but temporarily stable identities. Drawing on the contributions of Doreen
Massey, Ash Amin and Chantal Mouffe the chapter argues that local identity is
formed from the throwntogetherness of place or the collision of
micro-worlds . The diversity of perspectives
and values concerning the common good that arise from such
throwntogetherness , rather than fixed, essential identity, is seen as forming
the basis for a politics of place.
Therefore, it is argued that it is possible to construct a
non-essentialist politics of place that holds open the possibility of
overcoming oppositions between the particular and the cosmopolitan, the local
and the global.