“…Much work on globalization, modernity, and economic liberalization show for instance how some individuals, groups, and even states tend to cling to what they perceive as stable identity constructions in light of rapid change (Bauman, ; Beck, ; Freeman, ; Giddens, ; Kinnvall, ; Mitzen, ) and how these identity constructions become a matter of anchoring a constant notion of self in narrative structures. Similarly, a number of studies of war‐torn societies and peace‐building processes indicate how dealing with traumatic pasts and demonized images of other groups or societies often involve a search for secure narratives of the past as manifest in national, ethnic, or religious histories and symbols (Björkdahl and Mannergren Selimovic, ; Bar‐Tal, Abutbul Selinger, & Raviv, ; Strömbom, ).…”