TY - JOUR
T1 - Territory, islandness, and the secessionist imaginary
T2 - Why do very small communities favour autonomy over integration?
AU - Corbett, Jack
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding for this research was provided by the Australian Research Council (DP160100897) and the British Academy (SRG1819191216, supported by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy). I would like to thank participants at the 2019 ASEN Conference, University of Edinburgh, John Connell, Matt Bishop, John Boswell, and two anonymous reviewers who provided incisive comments on an earlier draft. Nick Clarke, David Owen, and Jonathan Havercroft gave helpful advice on relevant literature. Special thanks are reserved for Bob Marsh, Gavin Costigan, and Briony Grey who let me tag along on their trip to Antigua and Barbuda.
Funding Information:
Funding for this research was provided by the Australian Research Council (DP160100897) and the British Academy (SRG1819\191216, supported by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy). I would like to thank participants at the 2019 ASEN Conference, University of Edinburgh, John Connell, Matt Bishop, John Boswell, and two anonymous reviewers who provided incisive comments on an earlier draft. Nick Clarke, David Owen, and Jonathan Havercroft gave helpful advice on relevant literature. Special thanks are reserved for Bob Marsh, Gavin Costigan, and Briony Grey who let me tag along on their trip to Antigua and Barbuda.
Publisher Copyright:
© The author(s) 2020. Nations and Nationalism © ASEN/John Wiley & Sons Ltd 2020
PY - 2020/10
Y1 - 2020/10
N2 - Small communities should have the most to gain from integration, but the average size of the state is shrinking as island nationalism creates new, and very small, states out of former colonies, and federalised or autonomous territories. “Islandness,” as a proxy for territory, is employed as a resource to justify secession, but mainstream studies subordinate this factor in accounts that privilege ethnic, religious, linguistic, or economic drivers of identity. This article adds to a small body of work that foregrounds territory. Drawing on an in-depth case study of Barbuda's (population 1,600) attempt to secede from Antigua demonstrates how nationalists employ different meanings of territory—legal, cultural, and political—to make the case for secession in the absence of factors commonly theorised to drive identify formation. Barbudan secessionism therefore problematises mainstream theory. It concludes by arguing that paying greater attention to how territory acts as a resource in the nationalist imaginary allows us to re-examine long-standing studies and cases in new and penetrating light.
AB - Small communities should have the most to gain from integration, but the average size of the state is shrinking as island nationalism creates new, and very small, states out of former colonies, and federalised or autonomous territories. “Islandness,” as a proxy for territory, is employed as a resource to justify secession, but mainstream studies subordinate this factor in accounts that privilege ethnic, religious, linguistic, or economic drivers of identity. This article adds to a small body of work that foregrounds territory. Drawing on an in-depth case study of Barbuda's (population 1,600) attempt to secede from Antigua demonstrates how nationalists employ different meanings of territory—legal, cultural, and political—to make the case for secession in the absence of factors commonly theorised to drive identify formation. Barbudan secessionism therefore problematises mainstream theory. It concludes by arguing that paying greater attention to how territory acts as a resource in the nationalist imaginary allows us to re-examine long-standing studies and cases in new and penetrating light.
KW - Barbuda
KW - islands
KW - nationalism
KW - secession
KW - small states
KW - territory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85077996478&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/nana.12597
DO - 10.1111/nana.12597
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85077996478
SN - 1354-5078
VL - 26
SP - 1087
EP - 1103
JO - Nations and Nationalism
JF - Nations and Nationalism
IS - 4
ER -