Cultural Citizenship
Cultural citizenship
The concept of cultural citizenship responds to the multicultural context of contemporary societies, in which the concern with equality is increasingly being complemented with a concern with difference. Eurozine groups together texts articulating issues central to the concept. [ more ]
Eurozine Editorial
Cultural citizenship
Gerard Delanty
Citizenship as learning process
Rainer Bauböck
Who are the citizens of Europe?
Ivaylo Ditchev
Mobile citizenship?
Ivaylo Ditchev
Utopia of freedom or reality of submission?
António Sousa Ribeiro
The reason of borders or a border reason?
Rada Ivekovic
Tranborder translating
Edouard Glissant
The necessary relation between here and there
Charles Taylor
Democratic exclusion -- and its consequences
Leonardo Avritzer, Boaventura de Sousa Santos
Towards widening the democratic canon
Axel Honneth
Justice and communicative freedom
Axel Honneth, Krassimir Stojanov
Racism as a defect of socialization
Per Wirtén
Free the nation -- cosmopolitanism now!
José Manuel Pureza
Towards a post-Westphalian Internationalism
Authors employing the concept of cultural citizenship are unanimous in stressing that it is an underdeveloped notion that, if it is not to remain simply on an abstract level, will have to be further theorized and articulated in connection to specific issues and particular contexts. Eurozine's focus on "cultural citizenship" groups together a number of texts that, while not all dealing with the concept as such, put forward a sustained reflection on issues central to its articulation.
Introducing the focus is a text by Gerard Delanty, one of the main proponents and theorizers of the concept of cultural citizenship. Delanty's notion of cosmopolitan citizenship is based on the sociological idea of cultural citizenship, an idea that, as he makes clear, shifts the focus of citizenship onto common experiences, learning processes, and discourses of empowerment. Delanty has particularly stressed the learning dimension of citizenship as opposed to the disciplinary dimension. Such an understanding of cultural citizenship is crucial to the development of strategies of empowerment based on the everyday dimension of citizenship.
We have selected a number of texts that, in one way or another, are very much relevant to this discussion. Not surprisingly, some of these texts address the question of translation (Ribeiro, Ivekovic). If understood as the establishment of a dialogic relationship where mutual intelligibility is developed without difference being sacrificed to the interests of blind assimilation, translation is indeed crucial to the learning processes leading to cosmopolitan citizenship. Widening the democratic canon, as proposed by Avritzer and Santos, and, simultaneously, reflecting upon processes of exclusion, as Axel Honneth and Charles Taylor do, are an essential part of those learning processes.
Published 2007-07-02
Original in English
© Eurozine







