ABSTRACT

The idea of the nation is globally in crisis, but multiculturalism has often seemed to name a specifically national debate. Multicultural States challenges the national focus of these debates by investigating theories, policies and practices of cultural pluralism across eight countries with historical links in British colonialism: the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, South Africa, Ireland and Britain.
This important book combines discussions of the principles of multiculturalism with studies of specific local histories and political conflicts. The contributors discuss:
* communalism and colonialism in India
* Irish sectarianism and postmodern identity politics
* ethnic nationalism in post-apartheid South Africa
* British multiculturalism as part of the heritage industry
* feminism and Australian republicanism.
Contributors: Ien Ang, David Attwell, Homi K. Bhabha, Gargi Bhattacharyya, Abena P. A. Busia, Dipesh Chakrabarty, Terry Eagleton, John Frow, Henry A. Giroux, Ihab Hassan, Smaro Kamboureli, Maria Koundoura, Beryl Langer, Anne Maxwell, Meaghan Morris, Susan Mathieson and Jon Stratton

chapter |25 pages

Introduction

part |61 pages

The Limits of Pluralism

chapter |8 pages

Culture's in Between

chapter |11 pages

Liberalism and Minority Culture

Reflections on ‘Culture's in Between’

chapter |16 pages

Economies of Value

part |134 pages

Multiculturalism and the Nation

chapter |20 pages

Modernity and Ethnicity in India

Reflections on ‘Culture's in Between’

chapter |14 pages

Between Ethnicity and Nationhood

Shaka Day and the Struggle Over Zuluness in Post-Apartheid South Africa

chapter |10 pages

Postcolonialism

The Case of Ireland

chapter |28 pages

Multicultural Imagined Communities

Cultural Difference and National Identity in the USA and Australia

chapter |15 pages

Globalisation and The Myth Of Ethnic Community

Salvadoran Refugees in Multicultural States

chapter |13 pages

Ethnicity and Education

Biculturalism in New Zealand

chapter |15 pages

The Technology of Ethnicity

Canadian Multiculturalism and the Language of Law

part |72 pages

Positionings

chapter |27 pages

Lunching for the Republic

Feminism, the Media and Identity Politics in the Australian Republicanism Debate

chapter |15 pages

Riding Multiculturalism

chapter |15 pages

Re

Locations – Rethinking Britain from Accra, New York, and the Map Room of the British Museum

chapter |13 pages

Counter Points

Nationalism, Colonialism, Multiculturalism, etc. in Personal Perspective