The Narcissism of National Solipsism: Civic Nationalism and Sub-State Formation Processes in Scotland

Authors

  • Alex Law Abertay University

Abstract

This paper accounts for the lengthy emergence of sub-state nationalism in Scotland by locating it within British state formation processes. A spiral process of compromise and challenge characterises Scotland’s constantly evolving position within the United Kingdom. Despite the legalistic dilemmas that each challenge poses, the fissiparous process of sub-state remaking is rarely about ‘the constitution’ so much as shifts in the 'We–I' balance expressed by deeply contested political and moral differences between formally equal but distinct partners of the ‘union state’. Relieved of direct responsibility for the organised violence of great power politics, and notwithstanding the formative role of Scots in managing the British empire, a charismatic Scottish 'we-ideal' claims for itself the peaceful, humanist and egalitarian virtues of civic nationalism in contrast to the perfidious Machiavellianism at the heart of UK state power.

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Published

2017-09-01

How to Cite

Law, A. (2017). The Narcissism of National Solipsism: Civic Nationalism and Sub-State Formation Processes in Scotland. Human Figurations, 6(2). Retrieved from https://journals.le.ac.uk/index.php/hf/article/view/5405

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Articles