Page 27 - Fighting Against the Injustice of the State and Globalization
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                                                           Fighting Against the Injustice of the State and Globalization
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                                                      Oppressed nationalism emerges in the process of social transformation when a par-
                                                   ticular group draws upon certain aspects of its shared historical past in order to re-
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                                                                                                   There are both objective
                                                   spond to pressures felt within the modern world system.
                                                   and subjective factors that need to be considered in studying and understanding na-
                                                   tionalism.These factors involve cultural, social, economic, and psychological elements.
                                                   Nationalism cannot be reduced to any one of these elements. Cabral rejects simplistic
                                                   forms of economic determinism and asserts that “Culture, whatever its ideological or
                                                   idealist characteristics of its expression, is . . . an essential element of the history of a
                                                   people.... Like history, or because it is history, culture has its material base at the level
                                                   of the productive forces and the mode of production. Culture plunges its roots into
                                                   the humus of the material reality of the environment in which it develops, and it re-
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                                                   flects the organic nature of society.
                                                      To emphasize either the objective or the subjective factors reduces the complexity
                                                   of nationalism and distorts our critical understanding of this subject.Therefore, it is
                                                   necessary to look at the dynamic interplay of the material and the subjective forces
                                                   when we study nationalism. Cultural resources, such as language and cultural and his-
                                                   torical knowledge, can be transformed into material forces through human agencies.
                                                   It is this process that is not yet well understood.There are scholars who focus on the
                                                   subjective or objective factors in defining and understanding nationalism. Despite the
                                                   fact that some analysts consider language, religion, and culture as objective or material
                                                   as well as subjective factors, 119  there are scholars, such as Connor, who assert that the
                                                   linguistic, religious, and cultural factors are not determining factors in defining and
                                                   understanding nationalism. 120 Walker Connor sees a nation as people who believe that
                                                   they have a common ancestry. He thinks that subjective factors such as “the self-iden-
                                                   tification of people with a group—its past, its present, and, what is most important, its
                                                   destiny” are prime requisites in defining ethnonation and nationalism. 121  Although
                                                   some social scientists emphasize material or objective factors at the cost of subjective
                                                   ones,the latter “are recorded and immortalized in the arts,languages,sciences and laws
                                                   of the community which, though subject to a slower development, leave their imprint
                                                   on the perceptions of subsequent generations and shape the structures and atmosphere
                                                   of the community through the distinctive traditions they deposit.” 122
                                                      The dominant social classes and nations use cultural resources to promote their
                                                   interests.According to Markakis,“Cultural elements themselves may have a material
                                                   dimension if, as often the case, they mediate access to power and privilege. Lan-
                                                   guage, the basic cultural attribute of nationalism, often plays this role in multiethnic
                                                   states with a single official language. Groups whose languages are ignored by the
                                                   state may find themselves at a distinct disadvantage in competing for access to edu-
                                                   cation and state office. . . . Similarly, religion may be endowed with a material di-
                                                   mension.” 123  When we study anticolonial nationalism, we must explore how
                                                   colonized populations were cut off from their historical and cultural roots and civ-
                                                   ilizations—degraded and dehumanized by being reduced from autonomy to depen-
                                                   dence by losing access to their previously empowering cultural and economic
                                                   resources, and rendered powerless by colonial rule or racial/ethnonational domina-
                                                   tion. However, unless they commit genocide, colonial powers cannot eradicate the
                                                   cultures of the colonized populations; one of the major reasons that oppressed na-
                                                   tionalism emerges is the resilience of the cultures of the dominated populations. Be-
                                                   cause of this, national liberation is seen as an act of cultural struggle. 124  Returning
                                                   to their historical and cultural roots and developing political programs, some ele-
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