Patriotism and Pride beyond Richard Rorty and Martha Nussbaum |
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Authors: | Marianna Papastephanou |
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Affiliation: | University of Cyprus, Department of Education, Nicosia, Cyprus |
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Abstract: | Old and new complicities of collective political attachment in violence give patriotism a bad name. Simplistic positions often view collective attachment as either entirely bad or as sanitizable merely by adding to patriotism the adjective ‘critical’. Patriotic affectivity, as illustrated with the political emotion of pride, stands out within philosophical debates. This article argues that, to think about patriotism differently, we need to look more closely at ‘optics’ of patriotism and pride that have escaped debate although they are crucial for avoiding older pitfalls. To this end, I revisit Richard Rorty’s and Martha Nussbaum’s positions on pride by introducing more challenging examples of what being/feeling patriotic should mean. I reframe patriotism so that an ‘outward’ ‘optic’ acts as a strong corrective of the usual inward preoccupation with domestic issues within the polity and the state. |
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Keywords: | Pride shame patriotism cosmopolitanism Chagos xenophobia chauvinism |
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