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@article{ Hague2005,
 title = {Whiteness, multiculturalism and nationalist appropriation of Celtic culture:                the case of the League of the South and the Lega Nord},
 author = {Hague, Euan and Giordano, Benito and Sebesta, Edward H.},
 journal = {Cultural Geographies},
 number = {2},
 pages = {151-173},
 volume = {12},
 year = {2005},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1191/1474474005eu316oa},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-232297},
 abstract = {The League of the South (USA) and Lega Nord (Italy), formed in 1994 and 1991                respectively, are nationalist organizations that have utilized claims to Celtic                ethnicity to further their appeal. In this article we explore these claims, made in                relation to the southern United States and northern Italy, and argue that they are                used by these organizations to justify exclusionary politics. By claiming a                privileged status for Celtic culture, heritage and genealogy, the League of the                South and Lega Nord envision their putative nation-states as accommodating other                ethnic groups in subordinate roles. We argue that claiming Celtic ethnicity is an                implicit appeal to white privilege. In the proposed nation-states of the Confederate                States of America and Padania, white authority would be sustained. Further, the way                these groups use Celticness allows them to make links to specific historical and                material geographies. Claiming Celtic origins enables northern Italians to                distinguish themselves from southern Italians, and to make an associated                historical-geographical connection between themselves and northern Europe, enabling                disassociation from the Mediterranean. The League of the South claim to                ‘Anglo-Celtic’ ethnicity enables their membership to distinguish                themselves from other residents of the United States, be these non-white residents                of the southern states or other white people within the USA. Finally, we suggest                that some dominant political commitments to multiculturalism facilitate precisely                such claims to Celtic origins, however tenuous, to be made in the name of                recognizing and protecting cultural difference.},
}