The Illusion of Cultural Identity

by Jean-Francois Bayart

Steven Rendall (Translator), Janet Roitman (Translator), Cynthia Schoch (Translator), Professor Jonathan Derrick (Translator), and Jonathan Derrick (Translator)

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Book cover for The Illusion of Cultural Identity

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The concept of cultural identity has become for many a convenient explanation for most of the world's political problems. In The Illusion of Cultural Identity Jean-Francois Bayart offers a sustained critique of this rationalization by dispelling the notion that fixed cultural identities do, in fact, exist.

In this highly sophisticated book, Bayart shows that the very idea of cultural identity prevents us from grasping the cultural dimensions of political action and economic development. Identities, he argues, are fluid, never homogeneous, and sometimes invented. Political repertoires are instead created through imagined, highly ambiguous aspects of culture--what he calls imaginaires. For instance, the long beards worn by men in some fundamentalist groups are thought to be key to their core identities and thus assumed to be in conflict with modern values. These beards, however, do not stand in the way of the men's use of technology or their embrace of capitalism--an example Bayart uses to demonstrate the equivocality of cultural identity. The theoretical implications of Bayart's analysis emerge from a fascinating collection of historical examples that often surprise and always instruct.

  • ISBN10 0226039617
  • ISBN13 9780226039619
  • Publish Date 15 December 2005 (first published 24 October 2005)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Out of Print 27 July 2021
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint University of Chicago Press
  • Edition Annotated edition
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 296
  • Language English