Do human beings need belonging? Or is human self-realization basically an individual issue? The theoretical dimension of these questions has a bearing on questions of discursive power, symbolic representation and linguistic transformation. The question of how identities, solidarity and community are constructed under 'we'/'they' demarcations is crucial. The key problem is also one of everyday mythology and the symbolic terms in which it is conceptualized. The use of a vocabulary of 'construction' and 'invention' in this context does not mean that ties of solidarity and community are created entirely independently, but rather that they emerge in a complex interaction marked by historical and cultural conditions. Interests and identifications are not decreed once and for all by specific material/socio-economic positions, but rather evolve in a confrontation with other interests and patterns of identification in processes of problem resolution and search for social compromises. Concepts such as interest and identity are not essential but discursive categories, and as such undergo continuous transformation through processes of social bargaining.
Jesús Heredia–CarrozaCarmen López-RuizÁngeles Carrosa-ZayasCarlos Chavarría-Ortiz