Perspectives on cultural diversity: a discourse analytical approach
Perspectives on cultural diversity: a discourse analytical approach
In the European and British context, the much referred to concept of ‘cultural diversity’ and its equivalent in French and German is often evoked as complementary to, a synonym for, or an advance on, the similarly omnipresent term ‘multiculturalism’. This is mainly due to shifts in the perception of ethnically-marked difference in the postwar period. Particularly in the British context, these shifts were characterized by moving from a policy approach based on support for ‘ethnic minority’ cultures to multiculturalism, and then most recently to cultural diversity (Bennett, 2001: 58–9) In many different contexts, where metropolitan (as well as national and European) cultural policy engages with the relationship between people of different cultural backgrounds in European cities, cultural diversity seems to suggest a progressive, anti-discrimination agenda. However, when examined in more detail within the linguistic and pragmatic context of policy documentation and political debate, ‘cultural diversity’ becomes ambiguous, difficult to pin down, as well as contradictory. Whereas ‘multiculturalism’ discourses explicitly thematize questions of cultural coexistence or integration, and have been met with highly politicized support, critique or rejection, cultural diversity discourses are more fluid in their implications, and more in need of contextualizing within their respective political and cultural environments. Drawing upon key policy documents and political discussion produced at the European, national and metropolitan levels, we will explore in detail some of the linguistic and pragmatic contexts of cultural diversity and the semantic fields within which the term acquires its significance. Our aim is to examine the extent to which the multiple meanings of cultural diversity across the different levels and layers of policy and public debate in European nations, disguise or even potentially hinder and misdirect the discussion about greater transnational coexistence, which the earlier debates about multiculturalism had begun. Our critique is not intended as a defence of multiculturalism insofar as this has come to mean ‘a carnival of nations within nations’, but rather as a critique and clarification of the shifting term of ‘cultural diversity’.
1403997128
57-81
Kiwan, Nadia
b4b84973-92e6-4c26-a81a-04cfe5d73d12
Meinhof, Ulrike Hanna
56befd2f-b46a-4f5a-9738-24920308a376
2006
Kiwan, Nadia
b4b84973-92e6-4c26-a81a-04cfe5d73d12
Meinhof, Ulrike Hanna
56befd2f-b46a-4f5a-9738-24920308a376
Kiwan, Nadia and Meinhof, Ulrike Hanna
(2006)
Perspectives on cultural diversity: a discourse analytical approach.
In,
Meinhof, Ulrike Hanna and Triandafyllidou, Anna
(eds.)
Transcultural Europe: Cultural Policy in a Changing Europe.
Basingstoke, UK.
Palgrave Macmillan, .
(doi:10.1057/9780230504318_4).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
In the European and British context, the much referred to concept of ‘cultural diversity’ and its equivalent in French and German is often evoked as complementary to, a synonym for, or an advance on, the similarly omnipresent term ‘multiculturalism’. This is mainly due to shifts in the perception of ethnically-marked difference in the postwar period. Particularly in the British context, these shifts were characterized by moving from a policy approach based on support for ‘ethnic minority’ cultures to multiculturalism, and then most recently to cultural diversity (Bennett, 2001: 58–9) In many different contexts, where metropolitan (as well as national and European) cultural policy engages with the relationship between people of different cultural backgrounds in European cities, cultural diversity seems to suggest a progressive, anti-discrimination agenda. However, when examined in more detail within the linguistic and pragmatic context of policy documentation and political debate, ‘cultural diversity’ becomes ambiguous, difficult to pin down, as well as contradictory. Whereas ‘multiculturalism’ discourses explicitly thematize questions of cultural coexistence or integration, and have been met with highly politicized support, critique or rejection, cultural diversity discourses are more fluid in their implications, and more in need of contextualizing within their respective political and cultural environments. Drawing upon key policy documents and political discussion produced at the European, national and metropolitan levels, we will explore in detail some of the linguistic and pragmatic contexts of cultural diversity and the semantic fields within which the term acquires its significance. Our aim is to examine the extent to which the multiple meanings of cultural diversity across the different levels and layers of policy and public debate in European nations, disguise or even potentially hinder and misdirect the discussion about greater transnational coexistence, which the earlier debates about multiculturalism had begun. Our critique is not intended as a defence of multiculturalism insofar as this has come to mean ‘a carnival of nations within nations’, but rather as a critique and clarification of the shifting term of ‘cultural diversity’.
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Published date: 2006
Organisations:
Modern Languages
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Local EPrints ID: 46237
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/46237
ISBN: 1403997128
PURE UUID: 2e64f189-b612-401f-a06e-8ee20f93a1c0
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Date deposited: 06 Jun 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:20
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Contributors
Author:
Nadia Kiwan
Editor:
Ulrike Hanna Meinhof
Editor:
Anna Triandafyllidou
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