Better than Europe - Eurosceptical self-descriptions in Norway and Switzerland

In Norway and Switzerland the majority of the people rejected EU-integration in several referenda. The emotionality and the enormous mobilization that took place in the debates on integration cannot be sufficiently explained by economic and political reasons. Instead, the main resource aiding this e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jochen Hille
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 2007-01-01
Series:NORDEUROPAforum - Zeitschrift für Kulturstudien
Subjects:
Online Access:http://edoc.hu-berlin.de/nordeuropaforum/2007-2/hille-jochen-57/PDF/hille.pdf
Description
Summary:In Norway and Switzerland the majority of the people rejected EU-integration in several referenda. The emotionality and the enormous mobilization that took place in the debates on integration cannot be sufficiently explained by economic and political reasons. Instead, the main resource aiding this eurosceptic mobilisation for lies more inreactivating deeply rooted descriptions of the national self and those of the ‘others’. Carving out these collective images, this paper compares how the major eurosceptical actors of Switzerland and Norway describe their actions as meaningful in their iconography and narrations. Eurosceptics perceive themselves mainly as defenders of the national community and its nation-state, which are regarded as warm, natural, close, just, efficient, peaceful and democratic, while an integrated Europe is perceived as a distant, cold and bureaucratic super-state EU.
ISSN:0940-5585
1863-639X