基本説明
Considers the implications of the rise of the European Union for the ways in which people in the UK think of themselves as political actors.
Full Description
Relocating England considers the implications of the rise of the European Union for the ways in which people in the UK think of themselves as political actors. The book considers whether the elite ideas of 'Britain/Britishness' might be breaking down, thereby opening up the possibility of a broadly based re-animation of the ideas of 'England/Englishness'. Such a political-cultural project would imply great changes within the UK: democratisation, Europeanisation and modernisation. It is a threat to the elite, but it is an opportunity for the 'ordinary English'. The book follows in the footsteps of those scholars who have criticised the conservatism of the UK political establishment, their obsession with the 'special relationship with the USA' and their blithe disregard of the benefits of the mainland model of progressive social market democracy. -- .
Contents
1. Relocating England2. Political-cultural identity3. A development history4. The project of Britain 5. British political discourse6. Shock and price7. First implications 8. The EU project9. Story telling I: discourses of England10. Story telling II: discourses of Europe11. Afterword: subaltern dreams -- .



