Nations, Identity, Power
%50
829,85 TL
414,92 TL
Kategori
Yayınevi
Barkod
9781850654100
Yazar
Schopflin, George
Yayın Dili
İngilizce
Yayın Yılı
1999
Sayfa Sayısı
447
Kapak Tipi
Karton Kapak
Piyasa Fiyatı
18,99 GBP
Conceptions of nationalism as a historical and contemporary phenomenon remain fragmentary in the late-1990s. This text analyzes the contraditions inherent in the general understanding of nationalism in order to fashion a new intellectual synthesis. In particular George Schopflin questions why states in the West are able to live with the nation as the legitimate space for democratic institutions, wheras in the post-communist world, especially in Eastern Europe, ethnicity is pre-eminent. He argues that the nation is simultaneously ethnic, civic and structured by the state. Schopflin applies his understanding of nationalism to various East and Central European case studies, including the former Yugoslavia and Hungary. He also compares the role of ethnicity in other states, including Britain.
Review: 'a cornucopia of informed and detailed insight on the politics of identity. [A...] Schopflin's writing is lively and vigorous, if abrasive. Ethnicity, identity, nationalism and nationhood are intriguing topics for study and certainly inform European politics today. Schopflin has provided a fascinating book that deals with these issues in a thought-provoking, original and insightful manner. It is a great piece of erudite scholarship, which one will return to time and again.' -Times Higher Educational Supplement
Part 1 What is the nation? civil society, ethnicity and the state - a threefold relationship; citizenship, ethnicity and cultural reproduction; democracy, ethnicity and right-extremist movements; commemoration - why remember? Part 2 Ethnicity and cultural reproduction: a taxonomy of myths and their functions; social processes without actors? conspiracy theories and the quest for enemies in central and eastern Europe; aspects of language and ethnicity in central and eastern Europe; ethnic minorities in central and eastern Europe - analyses and prognoses. Part 3 The state, Communism and post-Communism: why empires fail; cultural diversity and good governance - some general considerations; the Communist experience and nationhood; an analysis of post-Communism; culture and identity in post-Communist Europe; the rise of anti-democratic movements in post-Communist societies; nationhood, Communism, and state legitimation; culling sacred cows? state frontiers and stability. Part 4 Minorities: the problem of ethnic minorities in central and eastern Europe; nationalism and ethnic minorities in post-Communist Europe; inter-ethnic relations in Transylvania. Part 5 The ethnic factor reconsidered: Englishness - citizenship, ethnicity and class; Yugoslavia - state construction and state failure; power, ethnicity and politics in Yugoslavia; Hungary and its neighbours -Hungary as a kin state.
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