Cultural Integration in the European Union - and the future of Sweden's past in Europe
(2014) EUHA20 20141European Studies
- Abstract
- Cultural integration has been recognized as an inevitable feature in the making of a coherent European Union, and for further approval of systematic integration. The initial cultural policy of the Union was based on normative assumptions and essentialist views on a European civilization. But issues in legitimization made for a more relativistic stance, and since the 70:ies, a more pluralistic approach towards the European cultures has been introduced. The European Heritage Label is a representation of the recent interaction between unity and diversity in cultural integration. Today the cultural politics of the member-states are to become Europeanised, but the decentralized view of the European identity will simultaneously allow for the... (More)
- Cultural integration has been recognized as an inevitable feature in the making of a coherent European Union, and for further approval of systematic integration. The initial cultural policy of the Union was based on normative assumptions and essentialist views on a European civilization. But issues in legitimization made for a more relativistic stance, and since the 70:ies, a more pluralistic approach towards the European cultures has been introduced. The European Heritage Label is a representation of the recent interaction between unity and diversity in cultural integration. Today the cultural politics of the member-states are to become Europeanised, but the decentralized view of the European identity will simultaneously allow for the member-states to have larger influence in shaping that process. This leads to the second aspect of my essay, where Europeanisation remains in a tug-of-war between the national and supra-national level, as we can see in the example of Sweden's hesitation to join. One conclusion was that such a decision was the result of diverging self-images between the EU and Sweden, since identity will favor certain heritages over others. The Swedish discourse has favored internationalization over supra-nationalization, and the Nordic geopolitical affinity has yet proven stronger. Sweden has been generous in sharing its cultural heritage to the other member-states, but the question remains on whether Sweden can share it with the European Union. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/4461336
- author
- Isaksson, Natali LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- EUHA20 20141
- year
- 2014
- type
- M2 - Bachelor Degree
- subject
- keywords
- Cultural integration, identity politics, EU, The European Heritage Label, the Swedish self-image, Europeanisation
- language
- English
- id
- 4461336
- date added to LUP
- 2014-07-07 11:34:26
- date last changed
- 2015-12-14 13:23:21
@misc{4461336, abstract = {{Cultural integration has been recognized as an inevitable feature in the making of a coherent European Union, and for further approval of systematic integration. The initial cultural policy of the Union was based on normative assumptions and essentialist views on a European civilization. But issues in legitimization made for a more relativistic stance, and since the 70:ies, a more pluralistic approach towards the European cultures has been introduced. The European Heritage Label is a representation of the recent interaction between unity and diversity in cultural integration. Today the cultural politics of the member-states are to become Europeanised, but the decentralized view of the European identity will simultaneously allow for the member-states to have larger influence in shaping that process. This leads to the second aspect of my essay, where Europeanisation remains in a tug-of-war between the national and supra-national level, as we can see in the example of Sweden's hesitation to join. One conclusion was that such a decision was the result of diverging self-images between the EU and Sweden, since identity will favor certain heritages over others. The Swedish discourse has favored internationalization over supra-nationalization, and the Nordic geopolitical affinity has yet proven stronger. Sweden has been generous in sharing its cultural heritage to the other member-states, but the question remains on whether Sweden can share it with the European Union.}}, author = {{Isaksson, Natali}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Cultural Integration in the European Union - and the future of Sweden's past in Europe}}, year = {{2014}}, }