Ethnonationalism, Walker Connor

Feffer, John

A HARDY PERENNIAL ETHNONATIONALISM The Quest for Understanding Walker Connor Princeton University Press, $14 95, 234 pp John Feffer Until recently it had been an article of faith among poh...

...The choice, Connor implies, is between two sets of myths Ethnic groups mythologize their common heritage, their exalted beginnings, their heaven-blessed destiny States that try to inculcate patriotism, an allegiance based on citizenship rather than ethnic identity, mythologize the virtues of assimilation and the resultant homogeneity of their population ("everyone in France is French and not Breton, Algerian, Corsican, etc ") There is no ultimate, objective truth, only a contest between myths that breaks into the headlines as "ethnic cleansing" conducted by the majority and "terrorism" waged by the minority Connor is expert in exposing such myths and accounting for their longevity What he doesn't do, and where Ethnonationalism could have been improved if he had, is to evaluate these trends Connor writes, for instance, that the "growing demand today, for good or evil, is to make reality approximate the myth of state unity by redrawing borders to reflect ethnic unity " But it is precisely this phrase "for good or evil" that sticks in the craw What should public policy be support the myth of state unity or the myth of ethnic unity7 Or can the two myths be contained withm a democracy that respects both majority rule and minority opinion7 In sidestepping these questions, Connor achieves a delicate neutrality in his essays, and methodologically speaking he should be applauded But with all the disappointing analysis currently available on nationalism, which often suffers from precisely the failings identified in Ethnonationalism, it would certainly be useful to have an ounce of prescription from someone of his analytical prowess Since we are still ensconced in the age of nationalism, however, Connor is in no danger of ceding his topic to the historians For good or evil, he has plenty of time to publish a policy-flavored sequel to this admirable collection of essays ? 24...
...The problems begin with definitions Nationalism, Connor stresses, "is subjective and consists of the self-identification of people with a group—its past, its present, and, what is most important, its destiny " Patriotism, often confused with nationalism, is an allegiance to the state, a political not an ethnic body To distinguish these concepts, the Russians have two different words for "Russian" russkie (ethnic Russian) and rossiyane (living on the territory of Russia) In English, however, the conflation of nationalism and patriotism produces an enormous cloud of confusion around the issues of ethnicity and citizenship For instance, as Connor points out, the term "nation-state" is in most cases a misnomer since only rarely does the state serve only one nation or ethnic group Moreover, "transnational" institutions—such as the European Union or GATT—are in fact interstate organizations Similarly, the United Nations is misnamed, for it contains states and not nations Given such definitional inexactitude, it is not surprising that political scientists make higher order mistakes With grace and precision, Connor directly tackles a series of myths sacred to the profession A chief assumption among political scientists, for instance, has been that increased modernization leads to greater ethnic assimilation Over time and as a consequence of higher economic growth, France becomes more French, Nigeria more Nigerian, and so forth Not so, Connor objects modernization brings previously isolated cultures into contact (and competition), while linking ethnically common but geographically dispersed peoples Increased communication and travel are more likely to differentiate peoples and increase conflict Nor has economic prosperity diminished demands for ethnic autonomy Witness the persistent national struggles of Basques and Slovenes, despite their relative economic success compared to the majority (or previously majority) populations of Castihan and Serb Finally, "developed" Western states have not achieved the complete assimilation that they often claim Scratch the surface of most "homogenous" states and you'll find an often surprising ethnic diversity Scots, Welsh, Irish, Bretons, Catalans, Flemish, Bavar23 lans, Tyroleans, Lombards, Corsicans, Lapps, and so on Why have these myths of modernization, economic determinism, and assumed homogeneity persisted7 As Connor suggests, political scientists are quite uncomfortable with nonrational factors in political life Economic and political explanations generate more acceptable and more tangible empirical data than do psychological motivations But this interpretation, based on the limitations of the discipline, is charitable Consciously or not, political scientists often reflect prevailing majority opinion or the views of the political leadership in their estimates of what constitutes a nation Five years ago, whether Yugoslav academics considered Croatia to be a nation deserving its own state was apolitical issue, not merely a theoretical question Today, a Croatian academic goes through a similar process when evaluating Istnan or Dalmatian identity The tendency to buttress the dominant ethnic group's claims can be seen readily in the profession's pejorative characterizations of minority demands as "parochial," "particulanst," or "tribal" Where does all this leave the confused reader1...
...A HARDY PERENNIAL ETHNONATIONALISM The Quest for Understanding Walker Connor Princeton University Press, $14 95, 234 pp John Feffer Until recently it had been an article of faith among pohtical scientists that nationalism was on the decline Economic growth, technological advances, and geopolitical necessities, it was argued, were pushing the peoples of the world toward a recognition of commonalities rather than of differences Nationalism was a nineteenth-century matter, its sporadic outbursts in the twentieth-century purely anachronistic In no time at all, these ideologies of blood and soil would become entirely passe, like feudalism or phrenology Long before the Yugoslav wars and the break-up of the Soviet Union, Walker Connor stubbornly resisted this consensus Publishing his conclusions in scholarly journals, Connor consistently maintained that ethnonationahsm—a loyalty to one's "kind"—was not disap22 peanng, indeed, had never been stronger According to this heretical professor of political science from Trinity College in Connecticut, the age of nationalism never ended It is with us still in Bosnia, m Spain, throughout the developing world, and yes, even in the "postethnic" United States Ethnonationahsm A Quest for Understanding is a collection of Connor's essays spanning a twenty-five-year period So prescient are these articles—and so enduring the problems they tackle—that updating has required only a handful of footnotes and bracketed information In part, the writing remains timely because Connor does not confine his analysis to particular conflicts Interested in the larger picture, Connor focuses on the political science profession and its misconceptions, stereotypes, andjust plain ignorance of nationalism Where have Connor's colleagues gone wrong...

Vol. 121 • April 1994 • No. 7


 
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