Prishtina City Centre |
Since arriving in early June, I have
been undertaking my fieldwork in Prishtina, Kosovo, on political
rhetoric and urban mobilisation. I am interested in how rhetoric, as
a “moving force” between culture and events, may influence how
people form their relationships and how they mobilise. My research
then inquires into the reasons through which political actions occur
and how communities form and fragment.
Election poster"appropriated" by passersby |
But what got me interested in this,
you may ask, and why Prishtina? My fascination with Kosovo
stems partially from my American childhood, when I viewed coverage of
the war during the late 1990s. Being between 11 and 12 years old,
that was one of the first military engagements I can remember.
However, this reason remains in the background; in the foreground, I
picked Kosovo's capital city as a case study due to the internal
dynamics we can see happening in the country today. On the one end,
you have an international community building the new country in its
own image and, on the other, you have strong political divisions, as
can be seen in the country's ongoing
election drama.
I was introduced to these
dynamics when, as a Masters student in the Durham Global Security
Institute's Msc Defence, Development and Diplomacy programme, I
participated in a field trip to Kosovo in March 2013.As part of the programme, I was
exposed to Habermas's theory of the public sphere through an essay on
the anthropology of civil society. Armed with this concept, and
inspired by the field trip, I decided to make Prishtina, Kosovo the
case study for my Masters dissertation research, focusing on the
impact of inter-group communication on Kosovo Albanian identity.
I
arrived in Prishtina for my month of fieldwork in July 2013, during
which I carried out a collection of methods consisting of participant
observation and semi-structured interviews. Through these interviews,
I realised that, yes, the concept of the public sphere does have
relevance for Prishtina. However, not in the way viewed by Habermas,
of the existence or downfall of rational-critical debate. Instead,
news, political ideas, and events were being discussed just as much
in public spaces (such as cafes) as in the established media, either
online, televised, or printed. In effect, my reading of Habermas,
which focused on a more universal, classical view of the public
sphere, did not prepare me for what I found.
Prishtina City Centre |
Upon my return, my eventual conclusion
from my Masters research was that communication within public spaces
was acting alongside the media to bring groups together or split them
apart, as indicated in differences in perception of national identity
among the people I met. However, my month's worth of field data only
provided sparse indications, and I knew that I needed more
information in order to make stronger conclusions.
Theoretical confusion |
After completing my dissertation, I
embarked on a PhD programme at the same university, this time in the
Department of Anthropology, but under the same supervisor and still
affiliated with DGSI. During the first year of my PhD, I read heavily
into the topics of civil society, political organisation, rhetoric,
the public sphere, and urban anthropology, as well as the growing
number of Balkan ethnographies. From my reading, I came to view the
public sphere as a useful concept, in that it pinpoints a spatial
location where discourses are communicated between actors. However,
the theory, when presented by Habermas, is far too abstract and
universalistic in order to be applied to everyday interactions. It
assumes that the public sphere only occurs in locations where
rational-critical debate occur and that its presence necessarily
creates the conditions for democracy. Sociologists, such as Nancy
Fraser and Michael Warner, have picked up on this flaw and have
advanced theories of “counterpublics,” which acknowledge the
existence of conflicting parties within the public sphere(s).
However, these theories, while at least recognising discord, are
still difficult to apply to everyday situations without losing their
meaning.
But why use the public sphere as a
concept at all, you ask, and how is it relevant for your research?
Well, there is a stream of research within the public sphere field
focused on rhetoric, introduced by Hauser, who argues that rhetoric
creates collectively-held understandings, generates consensus on
social issues, and ultimately forms the backbone of the public
sphere. This focus is built upon by Michael Carrithers, who
conceptualises it as “the moving force which connects that which is
learned, culture, to what happens.” Rhetoric is a means through
which actors (“agents”) persuade others (“patients”) and, as
a result, viewing actions within the public sphere as rhetoric allows
us to view everyday communication within its interpersonal context.
Rather than an abstract forum, a theoretical focus on rhetoric and
culture leads to a view of the public sphere as a meeting place
inhabited by actors seeking to persuade, such as states,
corporations, organisations, and people.
Prishtina City Centre |
The study of public space within a
city then situates my fieldwork within the larger arc of
ethnographies of life within urban areas (or “urban anthropology”).
Specifically, the study of networks in Prishtina relates to Pardo's
study of networks of elites in the Italian city of Naples, while the
investigation of rhetoric within public space brings to mind
Mollica's, for example, investigation of funeral parades in Northern
Ireland. In Prishtina, public displays, such as advertisements,
banners, and political gatherings, were visible two weeks ago during
Kosovo's parliamentary elections.
At its core, my fieldwork then relates
directly with ethnographies of politics and political mobilisation in
urban areas. The focus on rhetoric, networks, and public space within
an urban setting leads me to look into the forms of relationships,
the influence of changes within the urban space on relationships, and
the types and content of rhetoric found within public spaces. As
stated at the beginning of this post, I am asking how rhetoric may
influence the formation and maintenance of relationships, and how
people within these relationships may then be mobilised for political
action. To investigate these questions, I am conducting participant
observation in Prishtina's public spaces and, after a couple months, I
will begin holding a series of interviews.
Works Cited
Carrithers, M., 2005. Why Anthropologists Should Study Rhetoric. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 11(3), pp.577–583.
Fraser, N., 1992. Rethinking the Public Sphere: A Contribution to the Critique of Actually Existing Democracy . In C. Calhoun, ed. Habermas and the Public Sphere . London: MIT Press.
Hauser, G., 1999. Vernacular Voices: The Rhetoric of Publics and Public Spheres , University of South Carolina Press.
Henig, D., 2011. The Embers of Allah: Cosmologies, Knowledge, and Relations in the Mountains of Central Bosnia. Durham University.
Mollica, M., 2012. Political Manipulation: Death, Dying and Funeral Processes in Northern Ireland. In I. Pardo & G. Prato, eds. Anthropology in the City: Methodology and Theory. Farnham, U.K.: Ashgate, pp. 155–172.
Pardo, I., 2012. Exercising Power without Authority: Powerful Elite Implode in Urban Italy. In I. Pardo & G. Prato, eds. Anthropology in the City: Methodology and Theory. Farnham, U.K.: Ashgate, pp. 53–78.
Warner, M., 2002. Publics and Counterpublics . Public Culture , 14(1), pp.49–90. Available at: http://publicculture.dukejournals.org/content/14/1/49.full.pdf+html.
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