Part of the openDemocracy Network

Immigration islands


The Return of Enoch: Enoch Powell's repatriation agenda must not be rehabilitated, argues Sunder Katwala.


The ugly economics of immigration: Paul Kingsnorth on why the left is out of step with working class interests.


Immigration and the Politics of Resentment: Shamser Sinha suggests the real problem is a politics that turns neighbour against neighbour.

MODERN LIBERTY



Digital Privacy Wars: Guy Aitchison flags up a debate on the threat business poses to digital privacy


The Stalker State: Phil Booth of No2ID on the proposed Comms database


Say 'No' to 42 days: Sign Amnesty's petition against extending pre-charge detention


What do we do now?: Anthony Barnett assesses the stakes for for liberals and radicals in David Davis's campaign against the erosion of rights and liberties


The Abundance of Caution: an authoritative essay by Anthony Barnett sets out the case against 42 Days

Sortition and public policy




A major new series from Imprint Academic on the use of randomisation in education, politics and other public policy areas. Special discount prices for OurKingdom and openDemocracy readers.

Labour After Brown

The next left -Life after the Labour Party: Gerry Hassan sees a historic opportunity for the emergence of a post-New Labour left.

Scottish Labour, where's the coffee?: Gerry Hassan assesses the prospects for Scottish Labour and its new leader.

Lesson for the Left from Chile to Britain: Hassan Akram offers a global perspective on Labour's malaise.

From Milibland to Johnson land?: Jeremy Gilbert argues for Labour without neo-liberalism.

Magical thinking on Britishness: Anthony Barnett critiques Liam Byrne on fraternity.

Rule of law at risk: Geoffrey Bindman calls for a turn away from the marketisation of government.

A new Bill of Rights for Britain?: Guy Aitchison analyses Parliament's proposed new Bill of Rights.

Miliband - by our rights we will know you: Claire O'Brien puts forward a new progressive vision for Labour.

Recapturing liberal Britain: David Marquand challenges Labour's constitutional orthodoxy.

Miliband and the Liberal Democrats: James Graham on the case for realignment.

What is Labour's British story?: Writing from Scotland, Gerry Hassan widens the OurKingdom debate on Labour's future.

This is not Brown's crisis but Britain's: David Marquand says social democracy is bust and Britain may be too.

The Challenges for Miliband's Progressive Fusion: Fabian Society head Sunder Katwala responds to David Miliband.

Fabian Society

America Votes, Europe Responds: Fabian Society conference on the US election result, Westminster Central Hall, 10am to 4pm, Saturday 8th November.

Visit the new Fabian Society blog: Next Left

delicious | digg | reddit | newsvine | furl | google | yahoo | technorati | diigolet

Syndicate content

Endism - A flawed vision of the future

Arthur Aughey, 17 - 07 - 2008
delicious | digg | reddit | newsvine | furl | google | yahoo | technorati | diigolet

Arthur Aughey: (University of Ulster): When I finished the manuscript of my book Nationalism, Devolution and the United Kingdom State (Pluto 2001) I did so with what I thought was not only a literary flourish but also a political warning. 

The literary flourish was intended to engage with Tom Nairn’s polemic against ‘UKania’ in After Britain (Granta 2000) where he had employed the Kakanian metaphor of Robert Musil’s novel The Man without Qualities. Nairn argued that just as the fond hope of Austro-Marxists that they could save the integrity of the Habsburg Empire from nationalist challenge came to nothing so too Labour's constitutional activism merely replayed the old Austrian saying - 'es muss etwas geschehen' (something must be done). However, the fatalistic end was implied in that action - 'es ist passiert' (it just happened). And what will just happen, is already happening, is the dissolution of the United Kingdom. It was like the old Austrian lament of 1916 we find in Strong (History of European Ideas 1984, p. 305): 

    Unser Kaiser is tot, is alles weg,

    is alles aus? Ja...es is alles

    aus! Nicht gleich...aber bald!

    (Our Emperor is dead, is everything gone,

    is everything finished? Yes, it's all finished

    Not quite yet...but soon!) 

The literary reference was to Josef Roth’s short story The Bust of the Emperor where he argued that the old Austro-Hungarian Empire did not collapse because of its inevitable contradictions (as Nairn implied) but because those who should have known better stopped believing in it. The Unionist warning was self-evident. 

Following Nairn, as I noted in my review of Mark Perryman (ed) Imagined Nation: England after Britain it is expected now of radicals to write and speak (as the subtitle proclaims) of the United Kingdom already broken up, its fate already decided at the bar of history. Nairn has done a good job. How casually this is assumed is illustrated in a recent interview in The Independent (22 June) with the novelist Ian McEwan. He ‘serenely predicted the balkanisation of the United Kingdom’ (note the word ‘serenely’) stating that ‘Great Britain (note: he doesn’t understand the difference between GB and UK) is an artificial construction of three or four nations. I’m waiting for the Northern Irish to unite with the Irish Republic sooner or later (note: wait on, Ian), and also Scotland could go its own way and become independent’. When asked if this prospect disturbed him, McEwan replied not and that the future lay with ‘Englishness’.

This state of mind I call ‘endism’ and its attraction to a certain type of radical pose is obvious. Not only does it appear visionary it also appears in tune with ‘history’. For novelists who can’t be bothered with the messiness of practicalities, it is also smooth and clean. To what Andre Gorz considered the most disturbing questions of all: given this condition, is another choice possible? given this choice, another condition?, the endist vision answers ‘no’ secure in its certainty and dismissal of contingency.  

It is actually a radical version of Hegel's Philosophy of History the appeal of which is its suggestion that 'the good is already fulfilled just in virtue of the fact that it is in the process of being fulfilled' (see J McCarney Hegel on History Routledge 2000). In this radically transformative understanding, expectation becomes fact. Devolution is on the way to becoming what it ought to be – the break-up of the United Kingdom. Not only should Scotland, for example, be other than what it is but crucially it already is other than what it once was – it is no longer British. Equally, for the English the 'is' of the devolutionary settlement encourages the belief that devolution should become other than what it is, an anticipatory move towards independence. That end is prescribed in the present. 

David Goodhart’s recent article (Prospect July 2008) provides another example of endism. Much of what he says is sensible and intelligent but his reflections on the Union are evidence of this disturbing endist trend. He begins by expressing his sympathy for British multi-nationalism and the virtue of an overarching solidarity. He also argues (correctly) that its break up ‘is still not inevitable’ and has no desire to see the Union dissolved. Nevertheless, he makes a very good case for dissolving it because he assumes there is benefit for England in that process and that the outcome will be reasonably benign. 

But why not make the case for the Union? Why not challenge the nationalist narrative rather than going with its flow? For example, the new nationalism is a romance that wants to emancipate people not only from the old political and cultural system (Britain) but also from their old cultural selves. That emancipation
can only found in a separation which is really a re-connection with the world for we are already ‘after Britain’. It announces a national identity unblemished by the inwardness of parochialism, championing the particular and the universal at the same time. That new home is in Europe and the Republic of Ireland is the model. Well, how secure in the European Union does the Republic feel now, bullied by Brussels and threatened with exclusion?  

In short, my point is this. If you do not subscribe to that end, why submit to the logic of endism? Why lose your belief when there is no need to do so? 

 

Toque said:

Fri, 2008-07-18 11:53

That IHT article has Guy Lodge making a comparison with Czechoslovakia:

“When the Czechs and the Slovaks split, it wasn’t because of a massive
fight — it was because no one would put forward a good case for keeping
them together,” Mr. Lodge said. “In the 21st century in Great Britain, no one’s put forward a clear, compelling case for why the union matters.”

He also said this:

"What you’ve had since devolution is that England and Scotland are
starting to drift apart culturally and politically, so they seem like
entirely different countries."

They are entirely different countries, you dolt. 

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><b> <i> <br> <p> <div> <img>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may quote other posts using [quote] tags.
More information about formatting options

In Pictures