Ethnography of a political ritual: speeches given to new Swiss citizens by representatives of the state |
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Authors: | Laurence Ossipow |
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Affiliation: | University of Applied Sciences Western Switzerland, Rue Prevost-Martin 28, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | Our paper examines speeches given at citizenship ceremonies in Geneva (Switzerland) in order to understand what makes a foreigner a new member of a national and especially of a cantonal entity. Focusing on speeches by three ministers over an interval of 4 years, we analyze their conceptions of the state, the nation, and of nationality, and the kind of change – if any – this rite of passage acknowledges. We observed that the variations that appeared, ranging from an assimilationist view to a conception of citizenship mainly encompassing rights and duties, reached beyond the political positions of the magistrates who wrote and read the speeches. We aim to show that official discourse covers a broad range of conceptions of the state and of citizenship, independently of the political position of the state representative making the speech. |
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Keywords: | naturalization nationality citizenship nation Switzerland ceremony speeches |
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