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Article
European Imaginaries and the Intelligibility of Integration
Journal of Contemporary European Studies (2010)
  • William Biebuyck, Georgia Southern University
Abstract
This article subjects ‘Europe’ and ‘European politics’ to critical reflection. The article advances in three parts. The first section discusses the importance of narrative in the broader discursive construction of Europe as a political object and reality. The aim of this section is to demonstrate the utility of two conceptual heuristics in particular—‘imaginary’ and ‘field’—insofar as they help to delineate specific discourses and practices related to European politics. The second section explores two imaginaries now influential in shaping the intellectual common sense around Europe: the ‘academic’ and ‘bureaucratic’ imaginaries. The article closes with the third section arguing that to contest Europe requires the destabilization of two assumptions that are foundational for both imaginaries of Europe: (1) the idea that Europe is something ‘already there’; and (2) Europe is something we ‘already know’.
Keywords
  • Imaginary,
  • European integration,
  • Narrative,
  • Discourse
Disciplines
Publication Date
2010
DOI
10.1080/14782804.2010.486967
Citation Information
William Biebuyck. "European Imaginaries and the Intelligibility of Integration" Journal of Contemporary European Studies Vol. 18 Iss. 2 (2010) p. 161 - 180 ISSN: 1478-2790
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/william-biebuyck/1/