Articles | Volume 68, issue 3
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-68-213-2013
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-68-213-2013
Standard article
 | 
07 Oct 2013
Standard article |  | 07 Oct 2013

"I feel Danish but...": a case study on national identity formation and ambivalence

L. Koefoed and K. Simonsen

Abstract. Non-western minorities in Europe, one can argue, are experiencing particularly vulnerable processes of subjectification and identification. They are often caught between double processes of inclusion/exclusion, integration/segregation or identification/estrangement. This article explores some of the complex and ambiguous processes of identification within this group, in connection with development of the spatial identity of Danishness. It starts with a short theoretical pinning down of the figure of "the stranger'' working as a basis for the empirical analysis. Organised in three sections, each interpreting a specific narrative of identification, the analysis subsequently explores processes and problems of identity formation within a minority group increasingly designated as "strangers'' within the Danish nation state. The article concludes on the different ways in which uncertainty and ambivalence infiltrate the identity formation.