Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
publishedVersion
Publication Date
6-2006
Abstract
This essay examines the emergence of national identity in international society through the curious example of “National Humiliation Day,” a special holiday proclaimed by the head of state in wartime and celebrated in local churches throughout the nation. It argues that the observation of humiliation days produces the nation as the sacred political community because it figures both problems and solutions in a “national” time that is radically different from the dynastic and ecclesiastical times that defined medieval Europe. Unlike those who suggest that the Peace of Westphalia instituted a dramatic shift to an international system of secular states, the essay argues that national humiliation days demonstrate an enduring overlap between the transcendental world order of religion and the temporal world order of territorial states. National humiliation days share not just an invocation of God in politics, but the continual invocation of the nation as the sacred political community. Thus, rather than being the result of a secularizing process, the nation is continually constructed through pastoral governance. The essay's second argument is more theoretical. It is common in constructivism and critical international relations theory to argue that nations are constructed through the production of foreign enemies in a clear division of a virtuous inside from a vicious outside. National humiliation day texts help us question this understanding of identity politics because they concentrate their critique on the national self rather than a foreign Other; the self here “Others” itself in a productive and contingent identity politics that allows more space for criticism and resistance. Yet the resistance generated in these humiliation holiday texts is not to nationalism as a category of identity per se, but to specific oppressive forms of the nation. Thus the essay concludes that the nation is generated not just through pastoral governance, but also through resistance to pastoral governance.
Discipline
International Relations | Political Science
Research Areas
Political Science
Areas of Excellence
Digital transformation
Publication
International Studies Quarterly
Volume
50
Issue
2
First Page
395
Last Page
419
ISSN
0020-8833
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Citation
CALLAHAN, William A..(2006). War, shame, and time: Pastoral governance and national identity in England and America. International Studies Quarterly, 50(2), 395-419.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4347
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://academic.oup.com/isq/article-abstract/50/2/395/1817024?redirectedFrom=fulltext