& Identity)
🔹 What is National Identity?
National identity = A sense of belonging to a nation. It includes:
• Shared language, customs, traditions
• Symbols like flags, monuments, anthem
• Feelings of pride, loyalty, and common culture/history
It’s NOT just about citizenship. It’s about who you feel you are and how you’re socially
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constructed to feel it.
Social Construction of National Identity
💬 Anderson (1983) – Imagined Communities
Nations are socially constructed through symbols, media, and education.
We don’t personally know everyone in our nation, but we imagine a shared bond.
• Media plays a massive role — think Royal Family coverage, WW2 documentaries, Team
GB Olympics hype.
🔹 Socialisation and National Identity
• National identity is imagined through stories, not natural or fixed.
• Education: Teaching British history, celebrating Remembrance Day, Union Jack in
classrooms.
• Media: Representing “Britishness” — e.g. tea, politeness, queuing, English countryside.
• Language: English language tied to being “truly British”.
• Traditions: The Queen (now King), The Proms, royal weddings, Jubilee.
AO3: Who defines this “Britishness”? White, middle-class, English norms dominate —
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excludes minority groups.
Globalisation & National Identity
🌍 Global culture = challenge to national identity.
• Hall (1992): We now live in a world of hybrid identities – e.g. British-Asian, Black British.
→ People pick and mix identities from different cultures.
• Postmodernists: Globalisation leads to fragmented identities. People feel less connected
to national identity and more to global brands, online communities.
AO3: But rise in nationalism shows national identity can also be reasserted in response to
🔹 Immigration, Ethnicity & National Identity
globalisation.
• Gilroy (1993) – ‘There Ain’t No Black in the Union Jack’