Category Archives: Interviews

Interview with Professor Richard Jenkins

SEN Journal: Online Exclusives is delighted to present this interview with Professor Richard Jenkins, Professor of Sociology at the University of Sheffield. He was one of the keynote speakers at the 2012 ASEN Conference.

Vesselina Ratchev and Karen Seegobin interviewed Professor Jenkins at the 2012 ASEN Conference, held at the London School of Economics and Political Science on 27-29 March, 2012.

1. What are the main themes you’ve been working on this year?

When I was asked to give the keynote lecture, I thought I was going to give a fairly straight forward talk about boundaries and suddenly discovered that I am not really sure what boundaries are. But like Rogers [Brubaker] I also have a long standing interest in religion because of my interest in Denmark and Norway.

Continue reading

Interview with Professor Rogers Brubaker

SEN Journal: Online Exclusives would like to present this interview conducted with Professor Rogers Brubaker, a Professor of Sociology and UCLA Foundation Chair at the University of California, Los Angeles. He gave the Ernest Gellner Nationalism Lecture at the 2012 ASEN Conference and was also one of the conference’s keynote speakers. You can view a video of the Gellner Lecture on the ASEN YouTube channel.

Vesselina Ratchev and Karen Seegobin interviewed Professor Brubaker at the 2012 ASEN Conference, held at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Professor Rogers Brubaker giving the Gellner Lecture at the 2012 ASEN Conference

1. What are the main themes you’ve been working on this year?

I’ve been working my way into the literature on religion.

2. What is the best book on nationalism that you’ve read in the past year?

Well actually the most significant reading experience of the past year has been reading an old book. Why just new books? The old book I read which was very compelling and interesting is by Jose Casanova called Public Religions in the Modern World.

3. What new directions are nationalism studies taking?

The quality of nationalism is such that it is continually reinvented in new forms, so there is a guarantee that there will be continually ample material and that the literature will continue to evolve. There has been a massive cultural turn in nationalism studies in the last few decades, but it’s not a sharply bounded field. It’s marked off from the study of ethnicity, but there are interesting inter-penetrations. I think the religion-nationalism nexus is something which is increasingly interesting to a number of people. For instance, I spoke to someone yesterday who was doing an edited volume on nationalism and Islam.

4. What was the key piece of news from the last year that you found the most interesting?

I can think of some pieces not in the last year but the last three, namely the whole set of issues about economic crisis and nationalism. Once again, this is a rather undeveloped research terrain.

SEN Journal: Online Exclusives would like to thank Professor Brubaker for taking the time to be interviewed. For more on the topics discussed, please take a look at the following SEN articles, which can be found in the print edition:

Tibi, B. (2010), Ethnicity of Fear? Islamic Migration and the Ethnicization of Islam in Europe. Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, 10: 126–157.

Hellyer, H. A. (2011), The Allure of Politicisation of Religion – and the Necessity of Empirical Justification. Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, 11: 329–332.


Interview with Dr. Michael Skey

As part of SEN Journal Online Exclusives’ new theme of focus, ‘Banal Xenophobia in 21st Century Europe’,  we are excited to present this interview with Dr. Michael Skey, Senior Lecturer at the University of East London. We discuss Dr. Skey’s recently published book, National Belonging and Everyday Life: The Significance of Nationhood in an Uncertain Worldand ask him what the term banal xenophobia evokes in the UK and Europe today.

Karen Seegobin interviewed Dr. Skey on banal xenophobia and national identity in Britain.

1. Dr. Skey, thank you for doing this interview. Perhaps we can begin with you telling us a bit about your research interests and how you became interested in your field?

That’s a very long story! The short version is that I did a module on my undergraduate degree, which examined issues around nationalism and national identity. It was something that I’d never really considered before and it made me interested in the question of why so many people take for granted the idea that they live in and belong to a nation. Having left academia after doing a Masters, I stumbled upon a copy of Billig’s Banal Nationalism and this got me thinking about the topic again. I eventually applied to do a PhD, completed at the LSE in 2008, exploring three primary issues: how do national forms of identification and organization become objectified and ‘naturalised’, and why, and to whom, might they matter. As well as ‘everyday nationhood’, I’m also interested in the study of media events and rituals, everyday life, cosmopolitanism and sport.

Continue reading

Interview with Inga Fraser from the National Portrait Gallery

SEN Journal: Online Exclusives is excited to bring you the latest feature for our current theme on nationalism, ethnicity and art.  We are pleased to present this exclusive interview with Inga Fraser, Assistant Curator of the Contemporary and Later 20th Century Collections at the National Portrait Gallery, in London, UK.

Founded in 1856, the National Portrait Gallery seeks ‘to promote through the medium of portraits the appreciation and understanding of the men and women who have made and are making British history and culture, and to promote the appreciation and understanding of portraiture in all media’ [1]. Over the last thirty years the Gallery has commissioned some 160 portrait paintings, sculptures, drawings and mixed media works, as well as many photographs, which form the backbone of the Contemporary Collection.

Karen Seegobin interviewed Inga Fraser on the role of nationalism in the process of commissioning portraits for the National Portrait Gallery.

Continue reading