ABSTRACT

Collective identity, the emotionally powerful sense of belonging to a group, is a crucial source of popular legitimacy for nations. However efforts since the 1990s to politically support European integration by using identity mechanisms borrowed from nationalism have had very limited success. European integration may require new, post-national approaches to the relationship between culture and politics.

This controversial and timely volume poses the logical question: if identity doesn't effectively connect culture with European integration politics, what does? The book brings together leading scholars from several of the disciplines that have developed concepts of culture and methods of cultural research. These expert interdisciplinary contributors apply a startling diversity of approaches to culture, linking it to facets of integration as varied as external policy, the democratic deficit, economic dynamism and the geography of integration.

This book examines commonalities and connections within the European space, as well as representations of these in identity discourses. It will be useful for students and scholars of sociology, geography, anthropology, social psychology, political science and the history of European integration.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

After the failure of identity, what links European integration politics and culture?

part I|33 pages

Europe: a weak cultural identity

chapter 1|15 pages

Bringing the demos back in

People's views on ‘EUropean identity'

chapter 2|16 pages

A certain sense of Europe?

Defining the EU through enlargement

part II|35 pages

Mistaken identity

chapter 3|15 pages

Not quite ‘sui generis' enough

Interrogating European values 1

chapter 4|18 pages

Putting culture in its place

Anthropological reflections on the EU

part III|55 pages

Culture, ideology and a politically viable EU

chapter 6|17 pages

Cleaning up after European identity

The consequences of a failed political strategy

chapter 7|18 pages

European identity

Lessons from 20 years of social psychological inquiry

part IV|71 pages

Cultural alternatives to identity

chapter 8|18 pages

Lessons from the past?

Europe's grand shift from cultural homogenization to multiculturalism

chapter 11|21 pages

How culture and history shape Europe's differentiated integration

The cases of liberal international relations and northern Euroscepticism

chapter |23 pages

Conclusion

Cultures of defining culture — EU cultural policy in the context of the study of culture