Multicultural Politics of Recognition and Postcolonial Citizenship

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A01=Rachel Busbridge
Aboriginal Alterity
Australian Citizenship Test
Australian multiculturalism
Australian National Identity
Australian National Imaginaries
Australian Reconciliation Process
Author_Rachel Busbridge
Brown Planet
Category=JBCC1
Category=JBF
Category=JBSL
Category=JBSL1
Category=JHB
Category=JPFN
Category=JPVC
Category=NHTQ
Category=QDTS
cultural difference
cultural pluralism
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
exclusion
Good Life
inclusion
Indigenous minorities
Indigenous Political Agency
Indigenous sovereignty
minority groups
minority rights
Minority Struggles
Multicultural Citizenship
Multicultural Politics
multicultural society
Multicultural Struggles
multiculturalism
Muslim Difference
Nation Building
national belonging
national identity formation
Negative Interpellation
particularity
Post-colonial Nation Building
Postcolonial Citizenship
Postcolonial Feminists
postcolonial migrants
Postcolonial Politics
postcolonial theory
power relations
Problematic Nationalisms
Reclaim Australia
recognition
recognition politics in Australia
Recognition Struggles
the nation
universality
Vice Versa
White Australia Policy
White Western Feminism

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138659728
  • Weight: 462g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book examines claims for recognition of cultural difference from immigrant and Indigenous minorities, highlighting the ways in which they intersect with ideas of national community. Busbridge argues that there is an important, albeit under-explored, relationship between nation and multicultural politics of recognition.

Drawing on the Australian context, the book explores how nation features as a productive, if somewhat ambivalent, discursive resource in contemporary Muslim and Aboriginal struggles to be recognised. In demanding recognition, minorities enter into the business of ‘making the nation’ by positing alternative conceptions of national identity, culture and belonging that are more attentive to their differences and claims. This dynamic is engaged as an expression of ‘postcolonial citizenship’. Postcolonial citizenship is imagined in terms of the ways in which minority groups actualise multicultural realities through rewriting ideas of national community. It underlines the critical importance of revising the power relations that deem some groups ‘more national’ and others less so – and which, in Western multicultural societies, are typically tied to notions of the ‘West’ and its ‘others’.

This book is an important conceptual, theoretical and political intervention that brings postcolonialism and multiculturalism into dialogue on the increasingly potent issues of nation and national identity. It will be of great interest to scholars and students of sociology, politics, postcolonial studies, culture, identity and nation.

Rachel Busbridge is a Research Associate of the Thesis Eleven Centre for Cultural Sociology at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia.

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