1st Edition

Cultural Citizenship in Political Theory

Edited By Judith Vega, Pieter Boele van Hensbroek Copyright 2012
    112 Pages
    by Routledge

    112 Pages
    by Routledge

    Cultural citizenship is a recently developed concept in discussions on multicultural society, the media society, consumerism, and political theory. It addresses the various ways in which citizenship is becoming mixed up with culture, either through globalisation processes (involving new cultural identities, immigrations, culture industries) or by increasingly life-style oriented types of action. In the face of these challenges, the good old notion of citizenship seems in need of some assistance.
    This book takes a fresh look at cultural citizenship by exploring it from political-philosophical angles. It seeks to develop explicitly normative perspectives on the present debates around culture. What do the novel national and global constellations mean with respect to inclusion and exclusion, participation and marginalisation, political rights and ‘mere’ cultural practices? Moreover, this volume’s authors aim to develop notions of cultural citizenship beyond the liberal political paradigm that associates it with ‘cultural rights’, ‘cultural capital’ or the ‘consumer-citizen’. They engage the concept to re-think politics in both its meanings of citizenship practices and governance practices vis-à-vis citizens. The authors address a range of pertinent issues, exploring historical as well as present-day understandings, and theoretical as well as policy applications of the notion of cultural citizenship.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Citizenship Studies.

    1. The agendas of cultural citizenship: a political-theoretical exercise, Judith Vega  and Pieter Boele van Hensbroek,  I. Political philosophy goes cultural.  2. A neorepublican cultural citizenship: beyond Marxism and liberalism, Judith Vega, University of Groningen, the Netherlands.  3. Cultural citizenship, education and democracy: redefining the good society, Nick Stevenson.  4. Three cultural turns. how multiculturalism, interactivity and interpassivity affect citizenship, Gijs van Oenen.  II. Cultural practice goes political.  5. Cultural citizenship and real politics: the Dutch case, René Boomkens.  6. Cultural citizenship as a normative notion for activist practices, Pieter Boele van Hensbroek.  7. Cultural politics: disciplining citizenship, Davina Bhandar.

    Biography

    Judith Vega is Lecturer in Social and Political Philosophy at the University of Groningen. Her research addresses crossroads of politics and culture, viz. social justice and recognition, republicanism and feminism, and representations of urban life. She was editor-in-chief of the Dutch academic journal Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies.

    Pieter Boele van Hensbroek lectures in Development Studies and Political Philosophy at the University of Groningen. He studies political thought in non-Western societies, was editor of the African journal of philosophy Quest and works at Globalisation Studies Groningen (GSG).