The End of Illusions. Andreas Reckwitz

Читать онлайн.
Название The End of Illusions
Автор произведения Andreas Reckwitz
Жанр Социология
Серия
Издательство Социология
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781509545711



Скачать книгу

we are dealing here with members of the new underclass and the old middle class.22 For the latter, hyperculture and its cosmopolitanism are the domain of “elites,” whereas their collective identity movements are the medium in which the disgruntled, devalued, and aggrieved have come together to oppose what they perceive to be their unjust loss of social status and cultural influence. In this late-modern iteration of cultural essentialism, feelings of superiority and inferiority form an unusual alliance: those who feel inferior attempt to establish their own superiority via a collective identity.

      At the same time, cultural essentialism can also be interpreted on the global level – that is, in the relationships between national societies – as a mobilization of the peripheries against the center. In this case, the “center” is a real or imagined West from which forms of cultural essentialism in Russia, Turkey, Hungary, China, or India – in countries, that is, that perceive themselves as victims of Western hegemony – are attempting to distance themselves.23 Here, too, it is the case that discrimination and perceived affronts from the privileged – that is, from “the West” (in the form of the British as former colonizers, the United States as a superpower, the European Union under German and French leadership, etc.) – have been transformed into self-ascriptions of presumed superiority, which are meant to secure the identity of the slighted nations in question. If cultural essentialism exerts any influence beyond the social groups that have been left behind by modernization, it does so on the level of the state – for instance, through government-supported cultural, educational, and immigration policies.

      What happens when hyperculture encounters cultural essentialism?24 Many of today’s global and intra-societal conflicts can be deciphered as part of the conflict between these two regimes of culturalization. In this conflict, there are always two possible ways for each side to deal with the other: a strategy of coexistence qua assimilation, and a strategy of rejection as an absolute enemy. Assimilation entails making attempts to integrate phenomena of the other cultural regime into one’s own perspective and thus to make them manageable and coexist with them. Rejection as an absolute enemy entails perceiving the radical otherness of the different cultural regime and, accordingly, dramatizing this relation in the form of a friend–enemy schema. In all, there are thus four possible strategies for dealing with one another, and there are plenty of empirical examples of each one (see Table 1.1).

Culturalization I in relation to Culturalization II Culturalization II in relation to Culturalization I
Coexistence Multiculturalism Theory of cultural spheres
Antagonism “Open society and its enemies” “Decadence of the West”

      During the 1980s and 1990s, one formula for coexistence between hyperculture and cultural essentialism was multiculturalism.25 The multiculturalism of Western liberals proceeded from the idea that diverse ways of life represent a fundamental enrichment, so that ethnic or religious communities, for instance, were tolerated even if they were relatively closed off. Essentially, multiculturalism looked at cultural communities through a pair of cosmopolitan-diversity glasses, and what it saw was groups cultivating different lifestyles in which people chose to participate. The result, in short, was that orthodox Islam, veganism, and teenage subcultures were all regarded as being on the same level. From the perspective of multiculturalism, different sorts of groups are embodiments, as it were, of cultural options and styles, and they make no claim to absoluteness. Cultural capitalism, too, is ultimately based on economically applied multiculturalism: cultural communities with local roots thus appear as welcome contexts or reservoirs from which “authentic” cultural goods can be drawn, and these goods can then be commodified and appropriated (the tattoos of sailors, Middle Eastern cooking, the meditation of Buddhist monks, and so on).

      Hyperculture and cultural essentialism can thus interact in a state of peaceful coexistence. However, a coexistence of this sort only seems possible if both sides systematically misunderstand one another. In other words, this can only happen if, from the perspective of market-based and self-actualization-based culturalization, identitarian movements embody just another style or another chosen identity among many others, and if, from the perspective of cultural essentialism, hyperculture is merely a particular aspect of Western societies. However, as soon as these two regimes of culturalization begin to perceive one another as contrary ways of dealing with culture – which, from a sociological perspective, they in fact are – they see themselves as being fundamentally threatened. What follows is a culture war: a struggle over culture itself.