Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Cosmopolitanization
- cosmopolitanized
nation
- the
nationalism/cosmopolitanism
divide
Anmerkungen:
-
二分法的assumption:At the core of these dualities is an assumption that belonging
operates primarily, even exclusively, in the context of communal allegiances
expressing thick solidarities.
- methdological nationalism
Anmerkungen:
- the
national-territorial remains the primary container for the analysis of social,
economic, political and cultural processes. binding history and borders tightly
together is the only possible means of social and symbolic integration.
- cosmopolitanism
Anmerkungen:
- overcome the prevailing methodological nationalism,develop an analytical idiom of ‘modern society’ not limited to a
national ontology and suggestive of alternative modes of belonging.
- 局限
Anmerkungen:
-
1-- For one, it is frequently treated as a
normative concept focusing on a static ism rather than a process oriented
notion of cosmopolitization. This normative outlook tends to imply an antidote
to nationalism (Nussbaum 1996).
2-- On this view, the discussion revolves
around a dichotomy of the national and the cosmopolitan, which is mirrored in a
juxtaposition of universalism (often decried as a form of Western imposition)
and particularism (often dismissed as cultural relati-vism).
3--Lastly, these polarities are
underwritten by a simplistic (and a-historical) dichotomy of thick national
versus thin cosmopolitan belonging.
- formation of cosmopolitan nation
Anmerkungen:
-
1--we suggest that this figuration is
coextensive with new forms of sociability. More specifically, we propose a new
mode of collective identification by differentiating between presumptions of
thick belonging and the proliferation of cosmopolitan affiliations. This
reimagination of collectivities is, among other things, circumscribed in the
contex of global norms (e.g. human rights), globalized markets, transnational
migrations, embeddedness in international organizations and global risks.
2--we contend that cosmopolitization itself
is a constitutive feature/mechanism for the reconfiguration/reimagination of
nationhood. Focus on cosmopolitan
reality produces side-effects that are often not wanted and even go unobserved.
A ‘banal’ and ‘coercive’ cosmopolitization unfolds beneath the surface of
persisting national spaces.
3-- Globalization provides a new context
for the transformation of national identifications. cosmopolitanization imply
an interactive relationship between the global and the local. 是interconnec-ted
and reciprocally interpenetrating principles’ (Beck 2006: 72-73).
4--空间--时间:nationhood
is being recalibrated through the proliferation of imageries that are based on
the cosmopolitization of the temporal triad of past-present-future.
cosmopolitanized nations are reimagined through the anticipation of endangered
futures. They are reimagined collectivities based on new forms of affiliation
that are generated by shared encounters with risk.
- 关系
Anmerkungen:
-
1--nation is a constructed category: Cosmopolitanism
并没有否定nation的定义
2-- Cosmopolitanism itself is articulated
in opposition to this conventional (i.e. naturalized image) and inevitable
version of the nation. Accordingly, nationalism and cosmopolitanism are
frequently conceptualized as part of an unchanging zero-sum game. Cosmopolitanism
as complementary to nationalism。
- national
time--cosmoplitan
time
Anmerkungen:
-
1--a resilient methodological nationalism
bound up with the presupposition that the national-territorial remains the key
principle and yardstick for the study of social, economic, political and
cultural processes (Beck and Sznaider 2006b, 2010; Levy and Sznaider 2010). On
this view, the nation-state reflects a ‘spatial understanding of the
possibility of political community, an understanding that necessarily gives
priority to the fixing of processes of historical change in space. Not only
does the principle of state sovereignty reflect a historically specific
resolution of questions about the universality and particularity of political
community, but it also fixes that resolution within categories that have
absorbed a metaphysical claim to timelessness. . . . Time and change are
perceived as dangers to be contained’ (Walker 1990: 172-173).
2-需要一个changing temporal
figuration,temporal conception(religious-myth,national--modern state producing empty and homogeneous time,都是为了provide
political 和 cultural response to the future,contemporary
global--fragmented,absense of dominant narrative of the future,contingent)risk 不会导致pure
normative cosmopolitanism,而是produce “impure”--global other in our midest。而产生的 risk
collectivity= imagine cosmopolitan collecitivity, can no longer be
socially delimited in space or time。模糊不清。
- cosmopolitan
figuration
Anmerkungen:
-
Figurations thus are webs of
interdependence, which tie individuals together and shape their collective
self-unders-tandings and the ways in which they articulate times within
changing existential coordinates. ‘People make up webs of interdependence or
figurations of many kinds, characterized by power balances of many sorts, such
as families, schools, towns, social strata, or states.’ (Elias 1978: 15) What
matters for our purposes, is that over time, these figurations frequently
mutate into new forms. Villages have become cities, tribal solida-rities are
absorbed into larger states, cities have become global to name but a few
examples for how collectives have been re-imagined in the context of changing
social, political and economic interdependencies.
- mediated
affiliation
- media
representation
Anmerkungen:
- 1. media representations have played a crucial role in these processes of reimagiNation.
2.The nation-state, at the turn of the 20th century, depended for its coming intoexistence on a pro-cess by which existing societies used represen-tations toturn themselves into new wholes that would act on people’s feelings, and uponwhich they could base their identities – in short, to make them into groupsthat individuals could identify with. This nation building process parallelswhat is happening through globalization at the turn of the 21st century.
- authentic
feeling s and
collective
feelings
Anmerkungen:
- So if the nation is the basis for authentic feelings and collective memory – as the critics of global culture seem to believe almost una-nimously – then it cannot be maintained that representations are a superficial substitute for authentic experience. On the contrary, repre-sentations are the basis of that authenticity.
- imagined
cosmpolitan
affiliation
Anmerkungen:
- media
representation create conditions for the expansion of affiliations beyond the
nation-state.
How can we apply the concept of imagined cosmopolitan collectivities in a new, expanded form, for exploring the social and poli-tical consequences of global risks?
- groupness,
narrow
understanding
of belonging,
strong form of
belonging
- cosmopolitan and
belonging/nationalism
Anmerkungen:
- 1.Cosmopolitanism, by contrast, is frequently cha-racterized (by both its normative champions and nationalist opponents) as the breaking down of boundaries: people associate freely, unmediated by blinkered categories of nationhood.
2.Under-lying this dualistic notion is an assumption that belonging operates primarily, even exclusively, in the context of communal allegiances expressing thick solidarities.
- Calhoun
Anmerkungen:
- 1.Craig Calhoun has pointed out, we ought not succumb to the opposite fallacy either, which presents cosmopo-litan identity ‘as freedom from social belonging rather than a special form of belonging, a view from nowhere or everywhere, rather than from particular social spaces’ (Calhoun 2003: 532).
2.Calhoun’s (2007) critical engagement with the nexus of cosmopolitanism and nationalism has yielded important insights.
3.According to Cal-houn ‘cosmopolitanism is neither a freedom from culture nor a matter of pure individual choice, but a cultural position constructed on particular social bases and a choice made possible by that culture and those bases‘ (Calhoun 2003: 544).
- 作者
Anmerkungen:
- 1.In our view, the cosmopolitization of these bases becomes a readily available complement and source for the reconfiguration of the national (not its alternative).
2.Ultimately, at both the national and cosmopolitan level, successful identificationswith distant others are predicated on a balance between immediate attachments with concrete others (e.g. kin, local) and thickening versions of solidarity with distant others (e.g. the nation, the global).
- cosmopolitanized
affliation
Anmerkungen:
- 1.People remain
indif-ferent to political decisions as such. It is not until they begin to
communicate with one another about the problematic consequences of decisions
that they wake up. It is this communication that shakes them out of their
complacency and makes them worry. It shakes them out of their indiffe-rence,
creating a public sphere and a potential collectivity of action.
2.In our language, it is global risk – or, more precisely, the staging and theper-ception of global risk – that creates imagined col-lectivities across allkinds of boundaries.
- Mediated
affilation
- the
world risk
society
Anmerkungen:
- World risk society: focuses on global institutional factors and transformation
process, exploring how global principals penetrate societies.
- transformation
- human right
imperative
Anmerkungen:
-
1-Cosmopolitanization focuses on national
abuse of human rights
2-this is find in increasingly
de-nationalized conception of legitimacy,which results in a
cosmopolitanized souvereignty.
3-human rights norms are a key site for the
incorporation of cosmopolitan imperatives into national consciousness and the
transformation of national self-definitions. 4-.institutional cosmopolitanism
as a top-down approach provide limited inference on how much transformation of
judicial sphere actually trickles down to society.
5-however law has jurisgenerative power
that encourage new form of subjectivity to enter public sphere, legal domain is
a strategic site for transformation.
- world market
imperative
Anmerkungen:
-
1- deregulation is vehicle through which
state incorporate world market regime and guaratee the rights of global
capitals as essential ingredient of the national.
2-- but we see a self-dilution of
unpolitical innocence in twofold sense: political class brought about the
alleged powerlessness to act through its own conduct, by imposed rules of
globalized market at national level under the banner of "reform
policy", thus giving rise to the alleged no longer controllable financial
world risk capitalism. On the other hand, no consensual global political
answers to the consequence of globalization, allegedly nothing can be done!
- migration," the
global other"
Anmerkungen:
- As greater economic interdependence is fostered
among countries through trade and investment, a transnational space is created
for the circulation not only of goods and capital, but for the
cosmo-politization of labour as well. Cosmopolitization through migration is
here created by the systema-tic link between labor emigration and develop-ment
and its institutionalization through natio-nal state policy with the sanction
of international bodies.
- moral ethical turn--Ong
Anmerkungen:
- media as enabling or dis-abling a moral-ethical disposition among individuals; the centrality of morality
- silver stone
Anmerkungen:
- couldry
- Chouliaraki
- global
generation, civil
society
movement
Anmerkungen:
- 1. all of these civil society actors have
three features in common:
first, they come as a surprise, which means,
they are beyond political and socio-logical imagination;
second, they are transnational or global in
their scope and consequences;
and third, they are centred on issues of
justice, equality and human rights using the virtual electronic space of the
internet, a powerful site for transforming and re-imagining the national
2--结果:产生global
generation--cosmopolitanized nation are being conflictfully recreated
Consequently, the idea of generations
isolated within national boundaries is historically out of date. What we are
observing is the rise of ‘global generations’ (Beck and Beck-Gernsheim 2009),
the deepening of generational gaps and conflicts at the same time inside and
across national borders, through which cosmopolitanized nations are being
conflictfully re-created.
3.Civil society movements are, after all, the entrepreneurs of the cosmopolitan
commonwealth. They not only develop the categories in which global issues of
poverty, human rights, women’s rights, justice, cli-mate change etc., are
formulated; they also place them in practice on the political agenda, both at
the national and the global level.
4.Of course, these
civil society movements are not a one-way street, but the full range of the
social forces will use its power, from fighters for human rights to political
and religious fundamentalists. Global civil society becomes a democratic space
for many opposing views including a range of anti-cosmopolitan uses as well.
- local
interpretation of
world religion
Anmerkungen:
- 1.we are living in an ‘age of comparing’ where all
religious believe sys-tems are in one way or the other present in all locations
of the globe. That fact – a shared present and universal proximity – creates
new forms of coexistence, interpenetration, resistance and conflict among world
religions. The ‘religious other’ is in our midst (Beck 2010). By committing
themselves to universalism, the world religions create a hierarchy of
superiority and inferiority which results in a radi-cal otherness.
2.
2--结果:on the one hand, by
decoupling modernity from Westernization, since this denies the West its monopoly of modernity. On the other hand, the certitudes of
Christian revelations are forced to confront the certitudes of the revelations
of Islam and other faiths. The result is that the necessity to compare
the dif-ferent religious faith under conditions of their mutual
interpenetration ends up in an everyday clash of religious universalisms.
- mediation, reimagination of
cosmopolitan risk
collectivity
Anmerkungen:
-
总结:1--cosmopolitanism,as a analytical paradigm,highlights the
emergence of new social spaces and imaginaries through their very interaction. Cosmopolitization
carries transformative effects for the inner grammar of cultural and national
identifications它的转变
themselves.
2--GMEs do set the agenda and create the
potential for phatic morality as a foundation of cosmopolitan risk
collectivities.
- media role
Anmerkungen:
- seminal
role of the media in producing new frameworks of identification.
- risk perception and mediated representations
Anmerkungen:
-
The linkage between risk perception and
mediatized disaster representations is not incidental but intrinsic to each.
Risks are social constructions and definitions based upon corresponding
relations of definition. Their ‘reality’ can be dra-matized or minimized,
transformed or simply denied according to the norms which decide what is known
and what is not. They are products of struggles and conflicts over definitions
within the context of specific relations of definitional power, hence the (in
varying degrees successful) results of stagings (Beck 2009: 30).
- power of media
Anmerkungen:
- power of the media:definitional
authority(Beck and Kropp),agenda-setting function foucus on diasters carry the requsit feature
of meida event(Dayan and Katz),social and cultural judgement constitute
risk。
- alleviate anxiety
Anmerkungen:
-
the global media(tiza)tion of risks also
provides new temporal narratives intended to alleviate our anxieties about the
future. risks are now enmeshed in an age of post-catastrophy via the principle
of premediation.
- Global Media Event
Anmerkungen:
-
GMEs are very much present in daily
routines because they call our attention long before they occur, there are
always people engaged in one or more of them, and, finally, when one event
concludes another will begin’ (Ribes 2010:5). They may depend on how disasters
are mediat(iz)ed and locally appropriated in the context of world risk society
- premediation and remediation
Anmerkungen:
-
区别:Grusin has pointed out: ‘Where remediation
cha-racterized what was ‘new’ about new media at the end of the twentieth century as its
insistent reme-diation of prior media forms and practices, pre-mediation
characterizes the mediality of the first decade of the twenty-first as focused
on the cultu-ral desire to make sure that the future has already been
pre-mediated before it turns into the present (or the past)’ Premediation
differs from remediation in that it is no longer concerned with earlier
questions about the authenticity of representation.
关系:Nor should it be confused with the prognostic ambitions of earlier
times. ‘Premediation is not to be confused with prediction. Premediation is
not about getting the future right , but about proliferating multiple
remeditations of the future both to maintain a low level of fear in the present
and to prevent a recurrence of the kind of tremendous media shock that the
United States and much of the networked world experienced on 9/11’ 。Premediating the
future entails remediating the past’ (Grusin 2010: 8).
- moral sensibility
Anmerkungen:
-
大部分学者认为:能产生是因为audience attentiveness and active involvment,empathy
Frosh: 强调phatic morality,the moral
ground created by long-term, habitual, ambient forms of mediated connectivity…’ 他认为:‘television is in
part morally enabling because of forms of inattention and indifference that
frequently characterize relations between the medium and its audience, as well
as between viewers and viewed’ (Frosh 2011: 385). Accordingly audience
inattention is not a deficiency but a necessary condition for what he calls
‘mediated sociality
- moral ethical turn--Ong
- outlook
Anmerkungen:
-
1.What are the conditions for the creation
of ontological security inscribed into cosmopolitanized nations? In order to
suc-ceed cosmopolitanism too needs to build on a set of pre-existing meaning
systems (and transform them without losing track of their ‘function’) and
attendant visions of the future.
2.How then can cosmopolitan figu-rations in
world risk societies become co-extensive with new forms of sociability? More
specifically, how can we differentiate between assumptions of thick belonging
and the proliferation of cosmo-politan affiliations?
3.these processes raise questions of
‘metho-logical cosmopolitanism’ (Beck 2000; 2006; Beck and Sznaider 2006) as
such, especially with regard to the relation between theory and empirical data
- summary: 1. the concept of
national--cosmopolitan nation 2.
modern collectivities preoccupied with
risk 3.risk cannot be forcast and
constrcuted by media. 4.
comopolitanied risk
collecticities--reimagination of
nationhood 5.cosmopolitan
reconfiguration of nationhood,how?
- cosmopolitan realism
Anmerkungen:
-
Cosmopolitan realism calls for neither the
sacrifice of one’s own interests, nor an exclusive bias towards higher ideas
and ideals. On the contrary it accepts that for the most part political action
is interest-based. But it insists on an approach to the pursuit of one’s own
interests that is compa-tible with those of larger entities. Thus
cosmopo-litical realism basically means the recognition of the legitimate interests
of others and their inclu-sion in the calculation of one’s own interests.
- modernity
Anmerkungen:
- not happen at the same time
- first--Beck,Gideens
Anmerkungen:
- 1.Characterized by progress from agrarianism, through the rise of industrialization, capitalism and the nation-state 农业社会--工业革命--资本主义社会转变
2. ‘Naturalized’ view of the nation
3. Establishment of national and international organizations,internationalization 国际组织出现
4. Organizations to represent the people?
5. Monological hierarchical communication
6. Mass-mediated events
7. Impersonality, anonymity and abstractness, but also ‘abstract’ trust in national organizations
8. ‘Simple’ globalization
- second
Anmerkungen:
-
1)World risk society
2) Re-invention of global political economic and social relations, the
re-invention of global self
3) Old organizations losing their legitimacy
4)Less trust in organizations
5) New media
6) Also dialogical
7) Either/or is replaced by both/and principle
8) Global risks, cosmopolitanization
- trust
Anmerkungen:
-
1.Social order is no longer based on personal trust, as within small
communities, but that modern societies are characterized by the increasing
importance of trust in systems, which is built on the belief that others also
trust these institutions, rather than on a feeling of familiarity that creates
solidarity (Luhmann, 1979).
2. Trust remains a risky undertaking (Luhmann, 1979).
- globalization
Anmerkungen:
-
1). Globalization concerns the intersection of presence and absence,
the interlacing of social events ‘at distance’ with local contextualities
(Giddens, 1991)
2).Five scapes on the move: junctures and disjunctures (Appadurai,
1990)
3) Disembedding (‘lifting out’) of social relations from local
contexts of interaction and their restructuring across indefinite spans of
time-space (Giddens, 1991)
- global risks and
crisis--Cottle 2011
Anmerkungen:
-
1) Constantly emergent or even enduring critical events and threats
that emanate from within today’s global (dis)order and that range across and
interpenetrate within different realms of global interdependency.
2)They constitute material and discursive sites for actions and
responses that extend, exacerbate or intensify processes of global
interconnection and, potentially, can deepen awareness of today’s globality.
3)In today’s mediated and mediatized world their elaboration and enactment within the flows and formations of
the world news ecology shapes their constitution and can also variously
influence their subsequent course and conduct.
- global media event
Anmerkungen:
-
1) Media events integrate society in a collective heartbeat and evoke
a renewal of loyalty to the society and its legitimate authority (Dayan &
Katz, 1994)
2)Spirit of communitas (Dayan & Katz, 1994) in imagined national
communities
3) Global media events situated in terms of their global
interconnections, boundarylessness and mobility (Cottle, 2011)
4) A mediated form of solidarity (Couldry, 2003), global
consciousness in a world community?
- mass self-communication
Anmerkungen:
-
1) Horizontal networks make possible the rise of mass
self-communication, decisively increasing the autonomy of communicating
subjects vis-à-vis communication corporations, as the users become both senders
and receivers of messages (Castells, 2009).
2)Constitutive character of communicative agency in second modernity
(Hier, 2008)
- cosmopolitanization
Anmerkungen:
-
1)Cosmopolitanization means internal globalization from within
national societies. This transforms everyday consciousness and identities
significantly. Issues of global concerns are becoming part of the everyday
local experiences and the ‘moral life-worlds’ of the people (Beck, 2002).
2)Thick and thin solidarities (Beck & Levy,2013)
- 对比
Anmerkungen:
-
1) From above vs
from below
2) Macro vs
micro
3) Structure vs
agency
4)Collective vs individual
5)Mass communication vs mass self-communication
6) Trust in traditional institutions vs trust in temporary groups and self
7)Either or vs both and