The repression of us- and we-hoods in European exchange students’ narratives about their experiences in Finland

Abstract

This paper is based on a postmodern approach to identity, i.e. identity is seen as unfixed, transient and contextually created. Through the narratives of French Erasmus exchange students on their daily lives in Finland, I demonstrate how they express, enact and co-construct multiple and unstable identifications with the various groups they interact with (us-/we-/they-hoods). Due to their specific status in the host country (they are ‘passing’ foreigners), Erasmus exchange students experience what can be described as “être-ensemble”. But what are the impacts of such a context on the ways the students talk about themselves and others (Finns, people from their own country and other Erasmus students)? The Erasmus programme is often portrayed by students themselves but also policy makers and researchers as a time of strong communal and intercultural experiences. Is this a postmodern myth? Based on interviews with Erasmus students from the Turku campus (southwestern Finland), the analysis of pronoun uses and represented discourses in French will help to provide some answers to the complex question of identification.

Authors and Affiliations

Fred Dervin

Keywords

Related Articles

Reason giving, city icons and the culture of cities: data from a radical interpretive perspective

From a radical interpretive perspective, the distinction between primary and secondary data is itself secondary. Taking as a case study sample newspaper accounts for the motive behind the famous hockey venue move in Mo...

Cathy O'Neil (2016) Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy, New York, St. Martin’s Press and Virginia Eubanks (2018) Automating Inequality: How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police, and Punish the Poor, New York, Broadway Books.

Providing personal data is something that we do on a regular basis, from filling out governmental forms and documents to indicating preferences and habitual patterns on social media and consumer websites. However, ther...

Social structure vs. self rehabilitation: IDF widows forming an intimate relationship in the sociopolitical discourse

The public discourse pertaining to IDF (Israel Defense Forces) widows, especially those cohabiting with a partner out of wedlock, is presented by means of a study that analyzes competing representations in the sociopol...

When the mosque goes Beethoven: Expressing religious belongings through music

The present article will provide insight on music as a vector of religious belonging: a female choir at a mosque in the Lake Geneva Metropolitan Region has reinterpreted Beethoven’s Ode to Joy with new text about the g...

A rough guide to musical anthropology

This paper has set out to be an introductory approach to socio-anthropological studies of music and all human behavior and narratives (as lore) associated to it. The path chosen for this was the somewhat convenient and...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP40934
  • DOI -
  • Views 222
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Fred Dervin (2011). The repression of us- and we-hoods in European exchange students’ narratives about their experiences in Finland. Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology, 2(1), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-40934