Britishness (Essay)
Britishness (Essay)
Britishness (Essay)
Turning
now
to
the
main
argument
itself,
this
essay
proposes
that
Britishness
is
not
something
that
should
or
even
could
be
defined
by
the
government.
The
reasons
are
threefold.
First,
the
British
identity
is
not
being
under
attack,
hence
the
claimed
urgency
to
strengthen
it
and
thus
combat
its
weaking
is
not
based
on
facts
but
rather
on
a
mere
political
calculus.
Second,
it
is
questionable
whether
government
has
a
right
to
operate
in
such
private
realm
of
its
citizens
as
is
their
identity.
Finally,
the
inevitability
of
creating
exclusive
rather
than
inclusive
identity
rules
out
any
top-down
processes
from
being
used
to
promote
national
identity
in
socially
cohesive
way.
After
analysing
all
three
main
points
of
this
essays
critique,
the
author
will
attempt
to
formulate
his
perception
of
Britishness
that
is
to
be
celebrated
as
an
achievement
of
the
British
society
rather
than
being
shunned
as
a
yet
another
empty
political
construct.
However,
before
the
main
analysis,
it
is
vital
to
introduce
the
circumstances
that
ignited
fierce
discussion
about
the
issue
of
identities
in
Britain
The
effort
on
the
side
of
political
elites
to
define
and
introduce
viable
version
of
Britishness
is
not
a
new
phenomenon
and
has
been
vividly
present
in
the
political
sphere
since
the
electoral
victory
of
the
New
Labour
in
1997.
For
the
Labour
government,
the
concept
of
One
Nation
represented
an
effort
to
identify
one
single
inclusive,
attractive
and
easy
to
identified
with
identity.4
However,
the
true
urgency
in
the
quest
for
a
common
identity
came
only
after
the
tragic
events
of
9/11
and
particularly
after
the
London
bombings.
Suddenly
the
issue
of
4
Peter
Ratcliffe,
Race,
Ethnicity
and
Difference:
Imagining
the
Inclusive
society
(Berkshire:
Open
one
has
to
consider
the
scale
of
the
pertinent
issue.
There
are
around
1.6
million7
Muslims
living
in
Britain,
yet
the
number
involved
in
terrorist-related
activities
does
not
exceed
1%
of
all
British-born
Muslims.
Secondly,
even
the
assumed
low
level
of
identification
of
the
British-born
Muslims
with
their
country
is
challenged
in
various
reports
and
studies
conducted
in
Britain
in
the
last
decade.
For
instance,
the
English
and
Wales
2007
Citizenship
Survey
shows
that
members
of
Pakistani
and
Bangladeshi
ethnicity
(two
major
ethnicities
to
which
majority
of
British-born
Muslims
belong)
share
strong
sense
of
belonging
to
Britain,
ironically
even
higher
than
White
British.8
In
another
study
specifically
aimed
at
recognising
dominant
trends
among
Muslim
communities,
the
researchers
could
not
come
with
a
ultimate
verdict
about
the
degree
to
which
British-born
Muslims
identify
themselves
with
Britishness,
hence
they
concluded
that
many
Muslims,
feel
comfortable
with
being
both
British
and
Muslim
and
do
not
feel
there
is
a
conflict
between
the
two.9
Although
one
might
suggest
that
one
or
two
studies
will
never
be
able
to
represent
the
sentiment
of
the
whole
population,
these
reports
are
still
important
evidence
that
any
notion
of
Britishness
being
threatened
might
not
be
based
on
sober
reading
of
the
reality
on
streets
of
Britain.
However,
even
without
the
sense
of
urgency,
one
might
still
argue
that
a
government
initiative
aimed
at
formulation
of
national
identity
is
in
long
term
a
beneficial
effort.
Yet
again,
this
might
not
be
entirely
true.
There
are
at
least
two
7
Munira
Mirza,
Abi
Senthilkumaran
and
Zein
Jafar,
Living
apart
together:
British
Muslims
and
the
main
deficiencies
in
the
concept
that
the
government
should
or
is
even
capable
of
building
a
stronger
identity.
First,
society
is
a
dynamic
entity
where
conditions
are
changing
rapidly,
yet
cannot
be
forced
to
change
that
easily.
In
other
words,
most
processes
that
are
observed
in
society
have
their
inner
mechanism,
independent
from
the
direct
control
of
people
let
alone
governments.
The
way
in
which
different
groups
of
the
society
perceive
and
define
their
identity
is
not
an
exception
in
this
regard.
To
put
simply,
it
is
hardly
conceivable
that
just
because
the
government
formulates
its
version
of
Britishness,
people
in
Britain
will
feel
sudden
and
strong
attachment
to
it.
Parekh
in
this
regard
emphasised
that,
identification
with
the
country
is
a
highly
complex
processand
it
develops
at
its
own
pace.10
This
clearly
indicates
that
the
muscularity
of
the
effort
to
strengthen
Britishness
as
proposed
by
the
Prime
Minister
would
neither
speed
up
nor
guarantee
the
acceptance
of
his
version
of
Britishness.
Second,
at
this
point,
the
key
issues
are
the
words
his
version.
There
is
an
assumption
shared
by
many
proponents
of
top-down
initiatives
that
in
order
to
strengthen
the
nations
identity,
this
identity
has
to
be
clearly
defined.
The
Prime
Minister
sent
very
clear
message
in
this
regard
when
he
stated
that,
to
belong
here
is
to
believe
in
these
things.11
The
issue
her
is
not
so
much
what
are
the
things,
but
rather
the
idea
that
somebody
else,
let
alone
government,
can
tell
10
Bhikhu
Parekh,
Being
British,
in
Britishness:
Perspectives
on
the
British
question,
ed.
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright
(Chicester:
Wiley-Blackwell
in
association
with
The
political
quarterly,
2009),
33.
11
Cameron,
Radicalisation
and
Islamist
extremism
another
person
or
group
of
people
what
they
have
to
agree
with
and
how
they
should
feel
about
certain
issues
just
for
them
to
belong.
The
irony
of
such
approach
of
the
government
to
something
so
private
as
ones
identity
is
its
clear
contradiction
with
exactly
those
things
that
one
should
believe,
namely
freedom
of
speech,
freedom
of
worship,
democracy.12
According
to
Jopke,
it
is
a
necessity
that
a
liberal
state
allows
its
citizen
to
follow
their
private
demons
as
they
see
fit,
within
the
limits
prescribed
by
maintaining
the
rules
of
liberal
democracy
themselves. 13
Thus,
by
implying
that
there
is
only
one
single
Britishness
which
is
to
be
propagated
whilst
being
defined
in
rather
exclusive
manner,
David
Cameron
negates
to
some
extent
his
call
for
being
hard-nosed
aboutdefence
of
our
liberty,14
since
any
liberal
democracy
should
definitely
allow
and
even
facilitate
the
opportunity
of
its
citizens
to
have
multiple
identities
and
preserve
their
culture.
Furthermore,
Camerons
rhetoric
is
in
stark
contrast
with
a
famous
speech
given
in
1966
by
Roy
Jenkins,
then
home
secretary,
who
emphasised
that
in
Britain,
there
is
no
need
for
a
melting
pot,
which
will
turn
everybody
out
in
a
common
mould[into]
someones
misplaced
vision
of
the
stereotyped
Englishman.
It
is
becoming
apparent
that
the
final
issue
in
the
concept
of
top-down
imposed
Britishness
is
its
inevitable
exclusivity,
which
consequently
undermines
the
whole
concept
of
formulating
the
national
identity
that
nation,
not
just
part
of
the
nation,
can
identify
itself
with.
The
reason
why
such
exclusivity
is
inevitable
12
Ibid.
13
Christian
Joppke,
and
Steven
Lukes,
Introduction:
Multicultural
questions,
in
Multicultural
questions,
edited
by
Christian
Joppke
and
Steven
Lukes,(Oxford
:
Oxford
University
Press,
1999)
1.
14
Ibid.
stems
from
the
fact
that
Britain,
as
described
by
probably
the
most
important
report
on
the
state
of
multi-ethnicity
in
the
recent
years,
is
a
community
of
communities.15
Thus,
any
effort
to
narrow
down
the
definition
what
does
it
mean
to
be
British
runs
a
risk
of
excluding
those
who
simply
thinks
or
lives
differently
than
what
is
perceived
to
be
the
mainstream
of
the
society.
In
other
words,
there
are
hardly
encompassing
yet
at
the
same
time
specific
enough
categories
that
would
cater
for
all
the
different
reasons
why
someone
might
feel
like
British.
Hence,
the
only
way
to
define
Britishness
whilst
preserving
its
unique
character
is
to
admit
that
to
feel
like
British
is
the
only
necessary
factor
by
which
ones
loyalty
to
the
country
can
be
measured.
It
is
then
the
very
capaciousness
of
Britishness16
that
enables
multiple
identities
and
loyalties
to
flourish
within
it. 17
At
the
same
time,
omitting
ethnically,
politically
or
religiously
based
criteria
in
determining
ones
Britishness
is
in
line
with
the
recommendations
to
de-nationalise
and
de-ethnicize 18
the
discourse
about
citizenships.
Even
though
Willets
perceives
Britishness
as
a
primarily
political
identity,
he
too
acknowledges
its
marvelous
openness,
as
there
is
no
ethnic
element
to
it
for
example.19
Bhikhu
Parekh,
The
Future
Of
Multi-Ethnic
Britain:
The
Parekh
Report
(London:
The
Commission
on
The
Future
of
Multi-Ethnic
Britain,2000),
56.
16
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright,
Introduction:
The
Britishness
Question,
in
Britishness:
Perspectives
on
the
British
question,
ed.
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright
(Chicester:
Wiley-
Blackwell
in
association
with
The
political
quarterly,
2009),
7.
17
Ibid.
18
Ali
Rattansi,
Multiculturalism:
A
Very
Short
Introduction
(Oxford:
Oxford
University
Press,
2011),
123.
15
19 David Willets, England and Britain, Europe and The Anglosphere, in Britishness: Perspectives
on
the
British
question,
ed.
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright
(Chicester:
Wiley-Blackwell
in
association
with
The
political
quarterly,
2009),
56.
British
question,
ed.
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright
(Chicester:
Wiley-Blackwell
in
association
with
The
political
quarterly,
2009),
105.
Bibliography
Abbas,
Tahir.
Recent
Developments
to
British
Multicultural
Theory,
Policy,
and
Practice:
The
case
of
British
Muslims.
Citizenship
Studies
9
(2005):
153-166.
BBC.
State
multiculturalism
has
failed,
says
David
Cameron.
BBC
News
Politics,
February
5,
2011,
accessed
December
3
,2012,
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-12371994.
Cameron,
David.
Radicalisation
and
Islamist
extremism.
Paper
presented
at
the
security
conference
in
Munich,
Germany,
February
5,
2011.
Gamble,
Andrew,
and
Wright,
Tony.
Introduction:
The
Britishness
Question.
In
Britishness:
Perspectives
on
the
British
question,
edited
by
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright,
1-9.
Chicester:
Wiley-Blackwell
in
association
with
The
political
quarterly,
2009.
Hazel,
Robert.
Britishness
and
the
Future
of
the
Union.
In
Britishness:
Perspectives
on
the
British
question,
edited
by
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright,
101-111.
Chicester:
Wiley-Blackwell
in
association
with
The
political
quarterly,
2009.
Joppke,
Christian,
and
Lukes,
Steven.
Introduction:
Multicultural
questions,
in
Multicultural
questions,
edited
by
Christian
Joppke
and
Steven
Lukes,
1-24.
Oxford
:
Oxford
University
Press,
1999.
Mirza,
Munira,
Senthilkumaran,
Abi,
and
Jafar,
Zein.
Living
apart
together:
British
Muslims
and
the
paradox
of
multiculturalism.
London:
Policy
Exchange,
2007.
National
Statistics.
Citizenship
Survey
April-December
2007,
England&Wales.
The
national
archives:
Statistical
release
3,
April
2008.
Parekh,
Bhikhu.
The
Future
Of
Multi-Ethnic
Britain:
The
Parekh
Report.
London:
The
Commission
on
The
Future
of
Multi-Ethnic
Britain,
2000.
Parekh,
Bhikhu.
Being
British.
In
Britishness:
Perspectives
on
the
British
question,
edited
by
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright,
32-40.
Chicester:
Wiley-
Blackwell
in
association
with
The
political
quarterly,
2009.
10
Ratcliffe,
Peter.
Race,
Ethnicity
and
Difference:
Imagining
the
Inclusive
society.
Berkshire:
Open
University
Press,
2004.
Rattansi,
Ali.
Multiculturalism:
A
Very
Short
Introduction.
Oxford:
Oxford
University
Press,
2011.
Willets,
David.
England
and
Britain,
Europe
and
The
Anglosphere.
In
Britishness:
Perspectives
on
the
British
question,
edited
by
Andrew
Gamble
and
Tony
Wright,
54-61.
Chicester:
Wiley-Blackwell
in
association
with
The
political
quarterly,
2009.
11