Abstract

If, as we argued in the previous chapter, national identity matters, that it is important to social actors, as well as being a useful concept for explaining their attitudes, actions and behaviours, how do we study it – in other words, how do we ‘get at’ national identity? This is not simply a matter of adopting the best research method, assuming such a thing ever exists, or a variety of methods, but closely connected with how we conceptualise national identity in the first place. In this chapter, we will give an account of our understanding of national identity, how we went about studying it, the methods we employed and the research designs we adopted. We will discuss our findings in the chapters which follow. There are two influential views in this regard. Firstly, there is the commonsense view, shared as we have seen by some theorists, that national identity is a fixed badge, something we all have been given, derived from our ‘nationality’, and there is little more to be said. Once we have it, a bit like an identity card, we are what it says on the tin. From this perspective, we can use it or ignore it, but there is nothing much we can do to change it, short of emigrating and taking another citizenship, or perhaps forging another identity. That, though, is wrongly to equate national identity with ‘nationality’, or citizenship. Nor is it simply a matter of where you were born. National identity is much more subtle and variable than that. It will probably be clear to the reader that living and working in Scotland has been a major influence on our thinking. ‘Nationality’, British citizenship, is not at all the same as ‘national identity’, being Scottish or indeed English. Our understanding of national identity, then, comes literally with the territory.

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