Internal Colonialism: The Celtic Fringe in Bristish National Development

Front Cover
Transaction Publishers, 1999 - Social Science - 390 pages

Recent years have seen a resurgence of separatist sentiments among national minorities in many industrial societies, including the United Kingdom. In 1997, the Scottish and Welsh both set up their own parliamentary bodies, while the tragic events in Northern Ireland continued to be a reminder of the Irish problem. These phenomena call into question widely accepted social theories which assume that ethnic attachments in a society will wane as industrialization proceeds.

This book presents the social basis of ethnic identity, and examines changes in the strength of ethnic solidarity in the United Kingdom in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In addition to its value as a case study, the work also has important comparative implications, for it suggests that internal colonialism of the kind experienced in the British Isles has its analogues in the histories of other industrial societies.

Hechter examines the unexpected persistence of ethnicity in the politics of industrial societies by focusing on the British Isles. Why do many of the inhabitants of Wales, Scotland, and Ireland continue to maintain an ethnic identity opposed to England? Hechter explains the salience of ethnic identity by analyzing the relationships between England, the national core, and its periphery, the Celtic fringe, in the light of two alternative models of core-periphery relations in the industrial setting. These are a diffusion model, which predicts that intergroup contact leads to ethnic homogenization, and an internal colonial model, in which such contact heightens distinctive ethnic identification.

His findings lend support to the internal colonial model, and show that, although industrialization did contribute to a decline in interregional linguistic differences, it resulted neither in the cultural assimilation of Celtic lands, nor in the development of regional economic equality. The study concludes that ethnic solidarity will inevitably emerge among groups which are relegated to inferior positions in a cultural division of labor. This is an important contribution to the understanding of socioeconomic development and ethnicity.

 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
5
TOWARDS A THEORY OF ETHNIC CHANGE
15
THE EXPANSION OF THE ENGLISH STATE
59
THE CONSEQUENCES OF POLITICAL INCORPORATION
79
The cultural consequences of incorporation
109
The political consequences of incorporation
119
INDUSTRIALIZATION AND REGIONAL ECONOMIC
127
THE ANGLICIZATION OF THE CELTIC PERIPHERY
164
The strain towards regional economic specialization
182
THE PERSISTENCE OF SECTIONALISM 18851966
208
SERVITOR IMPERIALISM AND NATIONAL
234
TWENTIETHCENTURY CELTIC NATIONALISM
264
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ETHNIC CHANGE
311
CONCLUSION
341
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About the author (1999)

Michael Hechter is professor of sociology at the University of Arizona. He is currently serving as visiting professor at the University of Washington, and before that was a Fellow of New College at Oxford University. He is the author of Principles of Group Solidarity, and editor of The Microfoundations of Macrosociology and Social Institutions.

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