Zombie multiculturalism meets liberative difference: searching for a new discourse of diversity |
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Authors: | Chris Shannahan |
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Affiliation: | Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations, Coventry University, Coventry, UK |
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Abstract: | This paper grapples with an unresolved tension – twenty-first century Britain is indelibly multicultural and yet diversity is increasingly depicted as a threat to social cohesion. A society characterised by superdiverse cities where some suggest that ‘multiculturalism has failed’. On the basis of an analysis of three dominant theoretical and ideological discourses – community cohesion, multiculturalism and interculturalism – it will be argued that there is an urgent need to forge a new understanding of diversity that can counter the zombie discourse that characterises current debates about diversity in Britain. Difference will be framed as a potential source of mutual liberation, not a problem seeking a solution. It will be argued that a critical engagement with political theology can help us to fashion a new discourse of diversity that is characterised by a hermeneutics of liberative difference, which can help to defeat the zombies sucking the life out of diverse Britain. |
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Keywords: | Multiculturalism community cohesion identity political theology liberative difference |
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