Rhetoric and Ideology in Social Identification: The Case of Second Generation Irish Youths
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Discourse & Society
- Vol. 1 (2) , 167-188
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926590001002003
Abstract
This article presents a social psychological analysis of ethnic identity among children born in England of Irish parents (hereafter referred to as second generation Irish). However, rather than drawing upon the cognitive models of identity currently popular within social psychology (e.g. Turner, 1987; Hogg and Abrams, 1988) it emphasizes the rhetorical aspects of identity, following the work of Billig (1987). It is argued that identity is not simply the automatic cognitive output of social categorizations (as currently conceived) but an active process, used and constructed in various ways to achieve certain goals. The argumentative nature of identity is revealed and located within a wider ideological context of intergroup relations and political conflict between Britain and Ireland. This is achieved through an analysis of the natural discourse of second generation Irish youths, obtained from ethnographic observation of those youths actively involved in the social and cultural activities of the Irish community in a large English city.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rhetoric and the recovery of civil societyEconomy and Society, 1989
- Language and Ideology: A Framework for AnalysisSociological Review, 1987
- Self‐definition and psychological group formation in an ethnic minorityBritish Journal of Social Psychology, 1987
- When liking begets solidarity: An experiment on the role of interpersonal attraction in psychological group formationBritish Journal of Social Psychology, 1985
- Social representations in the ordinary explanation of a ‘riot’European Journal of Social Psychology, 1985
- Some problems underlying the theory of social representationsBritish Journal of Social Psychology, 1985
- Interpersonal attraction, social identification and psychological group formationEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, 1985
- Prejudice, categorization and particularization: From a perceptual to a rhetorical approachEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, 1985
- Social categorization, interpersonal attraction and group formationBritish Journal of Social Psychology, 1983
- Ideology and Utopia.Journal of Educational Sociology, 1941