Patriots, Pensioners and Ordinary Mongolians: Deregulation and Conspiracy in Mongolia
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Patriots, Pensioners and Ordinary Mongolians: Deregulation and Conspiracy in Mongolia. / Højer, Lars.
I: Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology, Bind 85, Nr. 4, 2020, s. 749-770.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Patriots, Pensioners and Ordinary Mongolians: Deregulation and Conspiracy in Mongolia
AU - Højer, Lars
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - This article links the heavily deregulated Mongolian post-socialist economy with the emergence of highly patriotic-nationalist movements and narratives of conspiracy and suspicion. It is argued that an extreme alienability of value in the new Mongolian market economy goes hand-in-hand with a nationalist and xenophobic perception of the extreme inalienability of Mongolian values and the Mongolian nation state. This creates a prevalent ‘moral economy’ in which values are radically uncertain, while at the same time fervently protected, and where the extremes of uncertainty/suspicion and certainty, liberal flows and nationalist cuts, co-exist. In this Mongolian moral economy, the middle-ground has thus been marginalised, leaving little room for moderate voices, ambiguity and alternative ‘tempered’ responses, and the jump from one certainty to the next is often as short and hasty as the leap from radical certainty to radical uncertainty and full-blown, all-embracing and endless suspicion.
AB - This article links the heavily deregulated Mongolian post-socialist economy with the emergence of highly patriotic-nationalist movements and narratives of conspiracy and suspicion. It is argued that an extreme alienability of value in the new Mongolian market economy goes hand-in-hand with a nationalist and xenophobic perception of the extreme inalienability of Mongolian values and the Mongolian nation state. This creates a prevalent ‘moral economy’ in which values are radically uncertain, while at the same time fervently protected, and where the extremes of uncertainty/suspicion and certainty, liberal flows and nationalist cuts, co-exist. In this Mongolian moral economy, the middle-ground has thus been marginalised, leaving little room for moderate voices, ambiguity and alternative ‘tempered’ responses, and the jump from one certainty to the next is often as short and hasty as the leap from radical certainty to radical uncertainty and full-blown, all-embracing and endless suspicion.
U2 - 10.1080/00141844.2019.1606840
DO - 10.1080/00141844.2019.1606840
M3 - Journal article
VL - 85
SP - 749
EP - 770
JO - Ethnos
JF - Ethnos
SN - 0014-1844
IS - 4
ER -
ID: 215571978