Izvorni znanstveni članak
Considerations on the Scottish Referendum and a Discourse on the British Conundrum: Mill, Price and the Question of Nationalism
Huw Williams
; School of English, Communication & Philosophy, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK
Sažetak
The recent referendum on Scottish independence was characterised by a failing on behalf of the Better Together campaign to articulate a positive vision and conception of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. In particular, any persuasive notion of Britishness was notable by its absence. This paper attempts to shed light on the question of nationalism, in the British context in particular, by turning to the history of political thought, and the philosophical reflections of two British liberals, Richard Price and John Stuart mill. Their ideas are set out with reference to the civic/ethnic distinction and two main claims are presented. The first is that despite Price’s emphasis on a civic patriotism and mill’s embracing of many elements of ethnic nationalism, both their accounts ultimately cohere around the centrality of a “national history”. empirical doubts about the sustainability of the civic/ethnic divide are here reflected in philosophical discussions of nationalism. The second claim is that Price and mill’s account draw attention to the historical difficulty of constructing a persuasive British nationality whilst simultaneously suggesting the only obvious prospect for its succesful reconfiguration, namely the articulation of a genuinely British national history.
Ključne riječi
Scottish Referendum; British Nationalism; Richard Price; J. S. Mill; civic; ethnic
Hrčak ID:
140172
URI
Datum izdavanja:
24.6.2015.
Posjeta: 2.387 *