Which Love of Country? Tensions, Questions and Contexts for Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism in Education

The paper considers Martha Nussbaum's motivation for departing from her earlier cosmopolitan position in favour of now promoting a globally sensitive patriotism. Her reasons for endorsing patriotism will be shown as exemplary for related argumentations by other authors, especially insofar as lo...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of philosophy of education Vol. 50; no. 2; pp. 261 - 271
Main Author SCHUMANN, CLAUDIA
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.05.2016
Wiley-Blackwell
Oxford University Press
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:The paper considers Martha Nussbaum's motivation for departing from her earlier cosmopolitan position in favour of now promoting a globally sensitive patriotism. Her reasons for endorsing patriotism will be shown as exemplary for related argumentations by other authors, especially insofar as love of country as a motivating force for civic duty is understood as in tension or even as incompatible with cosmopolitan aspirations. The motivation for turning to patriotism as articulated by Nussbaum and others will be demonstrated to rely on misleading understandings of love of country as a possessive emotion. Relying on Alice Crary's (2007) critique, it will be argued that sound moral judgement with regard to the patria as well as from a cosmopolitan stance is equally tied to our sensitivities and equally requires their education. Furthermore, I will discuss Axel Honneth's notion of solidarity, a form of love inflected by justice, as a possible alternative for conceptualising the social bonding patriotic attachment is supposed to provide. However, a critical patriotism ultimately needs to transgress this inward‐directed focus and take into account how a country is seen by non‐citizens, the historical relationships and the obligations that arise in terms of historical justice in relation to other countries. If we take patriotism in this outward‐looking perspective seriously, we also come to understand why it would be a mistake to skip patriotism altogether. Rather than constructing cosmopolitanism and patriotism as mutually exclusive opposites, critical cosmopolitanism and critical patriotism can be shown to have different but complementary and mutually corrective functions.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-NP0PM10P-T
istex:3E99BA10FD8C373F46650A70D968A648FDCCB0F1
ArticleID:JOPE12205
ISSN:0309-8249
1467-9752
1467-9752
DOI:10.1111/1467-9752.12205