European University Institute Library

The essentialist critique of multiculturalism, theories, policies, ethos, Will Kymlicka

Label
The essentialist critique of multiculturalism, theories, policies, ethos, Will Kymlicka
Language
eng
Abstract
One important critique of multiculturalism is that it promotes "essentialism", reifying the identities and practices of minority groups. In Anne Phillips' words, multiculturalism "exaggerates the internal unity of cultures, solidifies differences that are currently more fluid, and makes people from other cultures seem more exotic and distinct than they really are". Multiculturalism has therefore become a "cultural straitjacket" rather than a "cultural liberator", and requires "radical overhaul" if it is to serve emancipatory goals. In this paper I challenge this claim. The phenomenon of essentialism surely exists, but is multiculturalism really to blame? I argue that the essentialist critique conflates different issues, jumping from critiques of academic theories of multiculturalism to critiques of government policies to critiques of everyday street-level discourses of ethnic difference. Once we distinguish these different targets, the essentialist critique is less damning to multiculturalism than initially supposed. Indeed, we may find that the theories and practices of liberal multiculturalism, far from being the cause of the problem of essentialism, are a remedy to them
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The essentialist critique of multiculturalism
Oclc number
914479020
Responsibility statement
Will Kymlicka
Series statement
EUI working papers. RSC, 2014/59EUI papersGlobal Governance Programme, 108
Sub title
theories, policies, ethos
Content
Mapped to

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