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The Political Logic of Cultural Revival: Ethnic Visibility, Linked Fate, and Electoral Politics in Africa

Date
-
Speaker
Amanda Robinson, Associate Professor of Political Science, Ohio State University
Location
Graham Stuart Lounge - Encina Hall West, Room 400
Abstract

Since 2008, prominent members of the Lhomwe ethnic group - a large but politically marginalized community in Malawi - have waged an aggressive campaign to revive their lost cultural heritage, including their language, names, foods, and dances. Existing research has linked such processes of “inventing tradition” to the strategic actions of political elites who benefit from mobilizing members of marginalized ethnic communities for political ends. Yet, because existing research has focused primarily on elite incentives, we know less about how such elite-led efforts translate into lasting cultural change and active political support among regular people. The Political Logic of Cultural Revival, through an in-depth study of the Lhomwe revival, argues that political elites invest in such revivals when doing so will bear political returns via increased ethnic visibility. Ethnopolitical leaders benefit from having the identity of their group members easily visible to others, because such visibility ties those individuals' fate to that of the larger group. Elite-led cultural revivals serve as a powerful tool for reifying distinctive group characteristics and incentivizing the adoption of related ethnic markers by (1) engendering demand for cultural distinctiveness by stoking group-based pride and (2) supplying the means to achieve it through explicit cultural instruction. Using a plethora of original data sources, The Political Logic of Cultural Revival provides a deep description of the (re)invention of a lost culture, as well as a general theory about how ethnic visibility is related to the practice of ethnic politics.

Biography

Professor Amanda Robinson is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Ohio State University. She completed a PhD in Political Science at Stanford University (2013) and a BA in Biology from Appalachian State University (2005).

Her research focuses on the ways in which identity and culture – defined by nationality, ethnicity, race, and gender – influence political behavior, and how political processes affect identity change, primarily in Africa and among the African diaspora.

She is a co-organizer of the Working Group in African Political Economy (WGAPE) and a co-editor of African Affairs.