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You dont belong in our family

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Idea that Brittany is an internal colony of France. Changed ... Fou r suggests Brittany have its own administrative, financial and cultural institutions ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: You dont belong in our family


1
You dont belong in our family
  • Nationalism And Identity
  • Bretons in France
  • Hungarians in Romania
  • By Casey Sale
  • And Adrienne Manuel

2
Theme
  • Our theme will be that of identity and
    nationalism.
  • Created identity
  • Earnest Renan said that to forget, and I will
    venture to say, to get ones history wrong are
    essential factors in the making of nations

3
Similarities
  • Hungarians in Romania and Bretons
  • A larger state with a Romance Indo-European
    language governs these smaller nations
  • Theirs is not a Romance language
  • Breton Celtic Indo-European language
  • Magyar Finno-Ugric language

4
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5
Breton population in France
6
History of the Breton
  • Bretons are emigrants from south of England that
    came over to Brittany, France in 3rd and 5th
    centuries AD. Amorican peninsula.
  • Conquered by French military 1488
  • Independent duchy until 1532
  • 18th century they finally identified origin of
    Breton as Celtic

7
Language Today
  • Survey of those 15 years and older in 1997
  • 30 said they could understand Breton
  • 20 said they could speak it
  • 15.5 can read it
  • 8 can write it
  • At the end of the 20th century
  • Estimated 240,000 Breton speakers
  • Fewer than half are regular speakers
  • Fewer than 70,000 speakers use it every day

8
Legal status of Breton
  • Hostile toleranceBreton has the same status as
    other non-official languages of the French State
  • French is obligatory in all published acts in the
    territory (1794)
  • French is the (only)
  • judicial language (1532 Edict of
    Villers-Cotterets)
  • language permitted in teaching (1794 and 1887)
  • language of commerce" (1975)
  • language of the Republic (1992 Constitution)

9
Legal status (continued)
  • 1951 Deixonne LawBreton allowed as an optional
    subject
  • France refuses to sign the Council of Europe
    Charter on Minority and Regional Languages
  • France has also made derogations from
  • Article 27 of the Pact of Civil and Political
    Rights
  • Article 30 of the Convention of the Rights of the
    Child

10
Identity and Nationalism
  • Those that feel strongest about their identity
    are often militant groups
  • Activists who want to separate from France
  • The non-militant population seems content with
    just assimilating into the French culture
  • Importance of the group wanting to save itself

11
What should they cling to?
  • Racial bond there is no racial purity
  • Linguistic unity they speak Gallo, Breton, and
    French
  • They take it from a shared location, culture, and
    history

12
Bretons created identity
  • Pitré-Chevalier and Arthur de La Borderie as the
     fathers of Breton nationalism 
  • After 1945 nationalists portrayed Bretons as
    being exploited socially, economically, and
    politically
  • made the movement more popular
  • Idea that Brittany is an internal colony of
    France
  • Changed stereotypes into good attributes

13
Language Culture Saving
  • One solution may be more self-governance.
    Decentralization
  • Fouéré suggests Brittany have its own
    administrative, financial and cultural
    institutions
  • the emergence and triumph of ethnic minority
    nationalism in Brittany and elsewhere in Europe
    would appear more directed toward the living
    future than to the irretrievably dead past as its
    adversaries so often charge Reece

14
Magyar in Romania
15
Magyar History
  • Treaty of Trianon (1921) broke up the empire of
    Austria-Hungary and conferred some of this land
    to Romania.
  • Hungary regained this land during World War II
  • Hungary's defeat in 1945 transferred Transylvania
    once again to Romania

16
Magyars, a Threat?
  • Magyars have
  • Formed significant political groups
  • A significant of the population
  • Past separatists

17
Romanian Population Stats
18
Illiberal Politicians
  • Use the populations susceptibility to scapegoat
    to the politicians electoral advantage
  • Proclaim themselves the defenders of the nation

19
Marginalization of Magyars
  • March 1990, anti-Hungarian riots in Târgu-Mures
  • Ruling party
  • Blamed Hungarians
  • Unitary Romanian national state
  • Nationalistic rhetoric in domestic politics

20
Reforms Are Treason?
  • The government would not meet Hungarian requests
    (labeled as treason) for reforms in education and
    local administration
  • Extremist groups and parties became more
    influential

21
Territorial autonomy
  • In response, the Hungarian Democratic Alliance of
    Romania (UDMR) radicalized
  • In 1994, wanted territorial autonomy
  • 1995, began a council on local administration
  • Government denounced this as illegal

22
In Power
  • 1996 coalition included UDMR
  • After signing bilateral agreements with Hungary,
  • Progress towards NATO membership
  • EU accession negotiations

23
UDMR
  • Worked hard for Hungarian rights
  • The opposition and the coalition disliked this
  • Reform blocked

24
Recent Legislation
  • Education in Hungarian
  • Right to use Magyar in areas with 20 or more
    Magyar
  • Public administration
  • Justice
  • 1997, signed the European Charter for Regional or
    Minority Languages

25
Magyar in Transylvania
26
Solutions
  • Autonomy
  • Recognition as a different group
  • Desire of the population itself to promote
    culture

27
Conclusion
  • Ethnic Romanians have made the Hungarian minority
    its scapegoat in the recent past
  • Scapegoating may occur in the future

28
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29
Bibliography of Breton
  • Broudic, Fanch. Hier, Aujourd'hui, Demain Le
    breton, langue en danger? Buhez, Association.
    Parlons du Breton! Rennes Editions Ouest-France,
    2001. 7-26.
  • Chardronnet, Joseph. Histoire de Bretagne. Paris
    Nouvelles Editions Latines, 1985.
  • Coadic, Ronan Le. Breton Identity. 27 February
    2005. 25 September 2007 lthttp//www.breizh.net/ide
    ntity/gt.
  • Fouéré, Yann. A Detailed Proposal for Reform in
    Brittany. O'Callaghan, M.J.C. Separatism in
    Brittany. Trewolsta A. Wheaton Co. Ltd., 1983.
    165-180.

30
Bibliography of Breton (continued)
  • Markale, Jean. Identité de Bretagne. Paris
    Editions Entente, 1985.
  • Reece, Jack E. The Bretons against France Ethnic
    Minority Nationalism in Twentieth-Century
    Brittany. Chapel Hill The University of North
    Carolina Press, 1977.
  • Timm, Lenora. Ethnic Identity and Minority
    Language Survival in Brittany. O'Reilly,
    Camille. Language, Ethnicity and the State.
    Volume 1 Minority Languages in the European
    Union. New York Palgrave, 2001. 104-125.

31
Bibliography of Magyar Population
  • "Language Data." Eurolang. Oct 4, 2007.
    www.eurominority.org. 22 Oct. 2007
    http//www.eurolang.net/index.php?optioncom_conte
    nttaskviewid22Itemid55langen
  • MacMillan, Margaret. Paris 1919 Six Months That
    Changed the World. New York Random House Trade
    Paperbacks, 2003. p. xviii, 486
  • Mazower, Mark. Dark Continent Europes
    Twentieth Century. New York Vintage Books, 1998.
  • Pond, Elizabeth. The Rebirth of Europe. 2nd Ed.
    Washington, D.C. Brookings Institution Press,
    2002.

32
Bibliography (continued)
  • Riagáin, Dónall Ó. "Many Tongues but One Voice A
    Personal Overview of the Role of the European
    Bureau for Lesser Used Languages in Promoting
    Europe's Regional and Minority Languages."
    Language, Ethnicity, and the State Minority
    Languages in the European Union, Vol. 1. Ed.
    Camille C. O'Reilly. New York Palgrave, 2001.
  • "The Situation of Hungarians in Romania in 2006."
    2006. Government Office for Hungarian Minorities
    Abroad. 22 Oct. 2007 http//www.hhrf.org/htmh/en/?
    menuid0404
  • Vachudova, Milada Anna. Europe Undivided
    Democracy, Leverage, Integration After
    Communism. New York Oxford University Press,
    2005.
  • Walzer, Michael. On Toleration. New Haven Yale
    University Press, 1997. p.28

33
Photo Bibliography
  • Flag of NATO. Wikipedia. 20 Oct 2005.
    http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageFlag_of_NATO.sv
    g
  • Flags. Romania. Dec 2002. http//ec.europa.eu/a
    vservices/photo/photo_search_en.cfm?videorefStar
    tRow21levelPROkeywordRomaniasrc1
  • Defence and promotion of Human Rights by the
    EC. 10 Dec 2003. http//ec.europa.eu/avservices/
    photo/photo_thematic_en.cfm?idmarkPRO,SYMB
  • The European Flag. http//europa.eu/abc/symbols
    /emblem/index_en.htm
  • ImageRMDSz.jpg. Wikipedia. 10 June 2006
    http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageRMDSz.jpg
  • Language Data." Eurolang. Oct 4, 2007.
    www.eurominority.org. 22 Oct. 2007
    http//www.eurolang.net/index.php?optioncom_conte
    nttaskviewid22Itemid55langen
  • Map of Transylvania. http//www.rmdsz.ro
  • Map of Brittany http//wikitravel.org/en/Brittan
    y
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