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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. To define national identity is to understand the fundamental underpinnings of connects people to their respective cultures; as such, the symbolic representation of said national identity is found in a vast array of entities that serve to reflect the specific components a given culture wants to portray as being important to and indicative of its global designation. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCNatlIDSymb.rtf
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that serve to reflect the specific components a given culture wants to portray as being important to and indicative of its global designation. The knowledge deficit of contemporary views is
best understood by examining the cyclical nature of national identity and the manner by which it is restricted to boundaries; correspondingly, according to Paasi, "to maintain identity is to sustain
boundaries, and to sustain boundaries is to construct inclusion and exclusion between social collectives" (Inclusion, Exclusion and Territorial Identities). The extent to which symbolic representation of national identity is
typically political in nature is both grand and far-reaching; that politics reflect but one of myriad components of a given culture speaks to the tendency to overlook the comparable value
of symbolic contributions from a social, religious or aesthetic perspective. One of the best examples of symbolic representation of national identity outside the realm of political inference is that of
social norms. Society is bound by a set of rules - some written, some spoken, others explicitly followed by virtue of inherent knowledge but all universally understood within the
confines of that particular culture - which serve to govern civilized behavior. The deviant behavior of breaking a social norm constitutes stepping over of very specific boundaries that prove
to delineate a mandated proximity and/or behavior man has imposed upon his own species. "...Boundaries are both symbols of power relations and social institutions in social and physical space
and that they become part of daily life through diverging institutional practices. As institutions, boundaries embody implicit or explicit norms and values, and therefore legal and moral codes" (Inclusion,
Exclusion and Territorial Identities). Cultural values dictate how and why certain societies behave in certain ways and, thereby, serve to construct the symbols of national identity. Adhering to
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