
Immigration, racism and nationalism are major political themes throughout the Western world, vigorously debated by politicians, the media, and the public at large. In the process, discourses are created and new ways of speaking about ourselves and others emerge. Debating Diversity is a highly original and controversial work which turns the debate itself into a topic, and suggests that a major problem of diversity may be the way in which it is debated. Based on empirical analysis of data taken from the context of migrant policies in Belgium, Debating Diversity discusses the way in which moderate voices in the debate construct a powerful discourse of tolerance. This tolerant discourse is found in news reporting, policy statements, social-scientific research reports, and government-sponsored antiracism campaigns and training programs. Despite the vast differences between this rhetoric of tolerance and the discourse of radical racist and nationalist groups, a remarkable consistency is revealed. The authors refer to this as homogeneism, a fundamental non-acceptance of diversity.An intimate connection is shown between the Belgian debate and aspects of wider European nationalist ideologies, and parallels are drawn with conclusions of research on racism and nationalism throughout the world, particularly in France, Germany, The Netherlands, the UK and the US.
Does the contemporary rhetoric surrounding diversity and tolerance actually reinforce the very social divisions it claims to address? Jan Blommaert, a noted scholar in linguistic anthropology and discourse analysis, utilizes empirical data from Belgian migrant policy contexts to investigate how moderate political discourse constructs a framework of 'homogeneism.' He argues that even well-intentioned antiracism campaigns and policy statements often rely on underlying assumptions that fundamentally reject true diversity, creating a consistent ideological pattern that mirrors more radical nationalist rhetoric.
What You Will Find
Scholars in the fields of sociolinguistics and political sociology frequently cite this work for its rigorous deconstruction of institutional language. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which requires a foundational understanding of discourse analysis to fully grasp the author's complex arguments.
Page Count:
233
Publication Date:
2004-01-01
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Inc
ISBN-10:
0203203569
ISBN-13:
9780203203569
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!