he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. Pádraic Pearse and the 1916 Easter uprising

A sense of national identification remains amorphous and inert unless it is cognitively structured and motivationally oriented. Perhaps the most consequential way of structuring and orienting nationalism is through emplotment (organizing in the form of a story). Emplotment commonly follows one of a...

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Main Author: Patrick Colm Hogan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bucharest 2014-06-01
Series:Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://compaso.eu/wpd/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Compaso2014-51-Hogan.pdf
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spelling doaj-2b04f89951574dfd908eba60359f1a012020-11-24T23:31:36ZengUniversity of BucharestJournal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology2068-03172068-03172014-06-01512947he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. Pádraic Pearse and the 1916 Easter uprising Patrick Colm Hogan0Department of English and the Program in Cognitive Science at the University of Connecticut, USAA sense of national identification remains amorphous and inert unless it is cognitively structured and motivationally oriented. Perhaps the most consequential way of structuring and orienting nationalism is through emplotment (organizing in the form of a story). Emplotment commonly follows one of a few cross-culturally recurring genres. In nationalist contexts, the heroic genre—treating military conflict, loss or potential loss, and reasserted sovereignty–is the default form. However, this default may be overridden in particular circumstances. When social devastation precludes heroic achievement, a sacrificial emplotment—treating collective sin, punishment, sacrifice, and redemption—is often particularly salient. Earlier work has examined cases of sacrificial emplotment in its most extreme varieties (treating Hitler and Gandhi). The following essay considers a more ordinary case, the sacrificial nationalism of the prominent Irish anti-colonial revolutionary, Pádraic Pearse, as represented in his plays.http://compaso.eu/wpd/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Compaso2014-51-Hogan.pdfEmplotmentgenreheroic narrativenationalismPádraic Pearse
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Colm Hogan
spellingShingle Patrick Colm Hogan
he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. Pádraic Pearse and the 1916 Easter uprising
Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology
Emplotment
genre
heroic narrative
nationalism
Pádraic Pearse
author_facet Patrick Colm Hogan
author_sort Patrick Colm Hogan
title he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. Pádraic Pearse and the 1916 Easter uprising
title_short he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. Pádraic Pearse and the 1916 Easter uprising
title_full he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. Pádraic Pearse and the 1916 Easter uprising
title_fullStr he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. Pádraic Pearse and the 1916 Easter uprising
title_full_unstemmed he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. Pádraic Pearse and the 1916 Easter uprising
title_sort he sacrificial emplotment of national identity. pádraic pearse and the 1916 easter uprising
publisher University of Bucharest
series Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology
issn 2068-0317
2068-0317
publishDate 2014-06-01
description A sense of national identification remains amorphous and inert unless it is cognitively structured and motivationally oriented. Perhaps the most consequential way of structuring and orienting nationalism is through emplotment (organizing in the form of a story). Emplotment commonly follows one of a few cross-culturally recurring genres. In nationalist contexts, the heroic genre—treating military conflict, loss or potential loss, and reasserted sovereignty–is the default form. However, this default may be overridden in particular circumstances. When social devastation precludes heroic achievement, a sacrificial emplotment—treating collective sin, punishment, sacrifice, and redemption—is often particularly salient. Earlier work has examined cases of sacrificial emplotment in its most extreme varieties (treating Hitler and Gandhi). The following essay considers a more ordinary case, the sacrificial nationalism of the prominent Irish anti-colonial revolutionary, Pádraic Pearse, as represented in his plays.
topic Emplotment
genre
heroic narrative
nationalism
Pádraic Pearse
url http://compaso.eu/wpd/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Compaso2014-51-Hogan.pdf
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