6 What is politics?
mere derivatives. They are not, and to think so precludes
an articulate understand-
ing of political behaviour. ‘Identity conflict’ has a very different nature, which is
better understandable if we talk more properly of a
conflict for the recognition of one’s
own political identity. What political identity is will be explained in a later chapter; it
is sufficient for now to think of it as the sense of belonging that keeps the members
of a political group together.
Political identity can refer to a new or renewed (the
former fascist countries, but
also France after 1945) nation, a party, a social movement (industrial workers in the
nineteenth century) or a cultural and political movement (feminism in the second
half of the twentieth century). The recognition they look for is two-sided: it comes
from the prospective members of the new actor, whom the initiators try to involve
and
convince, and from external players (the former imperial or colonial power, the
existing members of the political system, international institutions). The new iden-
tity is not pre-existent to the struggle for recognition, and ripens only in the course
of it – often in the fractured
shape of opposing factions, as happened with national
liberation movements. To make this visible, one only needs to replay the evolution
of his country’s or her party’s identity. Identity formation and struggle for recogni-
tion are self-standing processes of cultural and political nature, deeply rooted in
human anthropology, and in as much they accompany political life everywhere. By
no means can they be reduced to their pathological developments
such as national-
ism or religious fanaticism and easily dismissed, as they represent a major moment
in what in the second chapter of this Part I shall call ‘the subjective side of politics’.
There are obviously intersections between identity formation processes on the
one hand and coalitions based on rationalised self-interest on the other. A new group
striving to assert its identity may sometimes coincide with a coalition of people
interested in gaining more wealth against formerly privileged groups. But the over-
lapping is never so broad and frequent as to allow for the assumption of a systematic
coincidence; what is more, the drivers in identity struggles
are essentially different
from the materialistic and calculating mentality that dominates conflict of interest.
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