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Representations of individuals in discourses of laïcité from Le Monde:
Confirming or challenging the republican framework of identity?In recent decades, the notions of laïcité and identity have been subjects of controversy in France. The two concepts have become sufficiently co-associated since the 1990s to ensure each almost systematically entails the other. Findings from previous studies have pointed out harmful implications of this pervasive association for minorities in France, especially Muslims. This study examines further the ways laïcité and identity are interwoven by exploring who is represented (and how) in newspaper articles from Le Monde dealing with laïcité. Informed by Critical intercultural communication scholarship, intersectionality, and a Foucaultian approach to discourse, this study pays particular attention to the way identity categories are articulated with one another and in which power structures they are embedded. A selection of articles (N=239) published in the leading national newspaper Le Monde between 2011 and 2014 was collected for in-depth analysis. Results indicate tensions as regards the use of identity categories and representations of individuals within discourses of laïcité. Implications concerning the overall republican framework and the concept of laïcité are discussed.Keywords: laïcité/secularism; identity; religion; media representations
IntroductionEver since the debate about "national identity" organized by President Sarkozy's ruling right- , 'identity' has proven to be a controversial issue in France over the past years.The concept of 'secularism' (laïcité) has also been a subject of polemic in recent decades, especially through the attention paid to tensions between laïcité and Islam. Baubérot (2007) argues that the increasing representation of Islam as an opponent to laïcité went hand in hand with the construction of laïcité as a pillar of the national identity. Previous studies have pointed out the concomitant risks for minorities to feel excluded or pushed to choose between national and religious identifications because of the pervasive association between laïcité and national identity (Auslander, 2000;Baubérot, 2007). The notion of identity within the French context and especially in relation to laïcité offers a relevant window to explore intersections of power dynamics circulating within society.
2Drawing on Critical intercultural communication scholarship, intersectionality, and using a Foucaultian approach to discourse, this study sets out to understand who is represented in discourses of laïcité and, with which implications as regards the notions of laïcité and identity in the French context. The critical discursive approach used in this study aims at identifying normalized identity categories and questioning the power structures they represent and in which they are embedded. For this purpose, newspaper articles (N=239) published between 2011 and 2014 were selected for in-depth analysis. The newspaper LeMonde was used for data collection because (i...