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Minding The Campus
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Differences in culture, language, and perspective are deadly to the culture, language, and perspective of those seeking intercourse at the frontiers between them. To understand other nations takes work, time, and sacrifice. Becoming culturally, linguistically, and politically competent enough to exchange communication across national borders has costs.
This course asks students to consider the origins and sustaining conditions of nation-states. It focuses on the emergence and early history of nation-states and nationalist consciousness rather than on the more recent twentieth- and twenty-first-century manifestations of nationalism. It also considers nationalism largely in structural rather than ideological terms, that is, as a function of durable patterns in politics, culture and the economy. Questions addressed include: How did the nation-state come to predominate over other political forms such as empires and city-states? What causes us to identify with a particular nation? Is national identity a prerequisite for a modern sensibility or vice versa? Is a nation endowed with moral or spiritual significance? What is the relationship between nationalism and ethnicity and culture? How important are state institutions to the development of national identities? Where and how do markets and the economy fit into national political structures? And finally, what are the limits to nation-centric conceptions of culture, politics, and history? Readings include both theoretical works and historical monographs. The course begins with major theoretical studies of the rise of nations and nationalist consciousness. It then moves into a series of case studies that examine specific countries and contexts. The final few weeks are devoted to readings in the early history of the United States. These are designed to test the arguments of previous readings against the American experience, which lacks the ethnic homogeneity and linguistic uniqueness often thought to constitute national distinctions. Is the United States a nation-state and, if so, when did it become one?
European Journal of Social Theory, 1999
SPIRIT is an interdisciplinary doctoral school for the systematic study of themes and theoretical issues related to the intertwining of political, transnational and intercultural processes in the contemporary world. It is dedicated to examining-from the combined vantagepoint of both the human and the social sciences-cultural, political and communicative issues on a spectrum ranging from the local dimension over the national and the regional to the processes of globalisation that increasingly impinge on the organisation of life and the structure and dynamics ofthe world. The thematic issues range from questions of European identity and integration; over transnational processes of migration, subcultures and international marketing; to transatlantic problems or nationalism and religion in Eastern Europe or the USA. What ties them together within the framework of SPIRIT is the school's distinctive features: Analysing themes in the context of the meanings and implications of internationality, and taking cultural/communicative as well as political/sociological aspects into account. Considerable emphasis is placed on Europe-its history, politics, social anthropology, place in the world, relations to global issues, and trajectories for the future. On this background research is conducted within four thematic areas: 1. Studies of Identity, Mentality and Culture 2. Intercultural Cooperation in International Markets and Organisations 3. Migration, Spatial Change and the Globalisation of Cultures 4. International Politics and Culture
Journal of Democracy, 2010
One of the most urgent conceptual, normative, and political tasks of our day is to think anew about how polities that aspire to be democracies can accommodate great sociocultural and even multinational diversity within one state. The need to think anew arises from a mismatch between the political realities of the world we live in and an old political wisdom that we have inherited. The old wisdom holds that the territorial boundaries of a state must coincide with the perceived cultural boundaries of a nation. Thus, this understanding requires that every state must contain within itself one and not more than one culturally homogenous nation, that every state should be a nation, and that every nation should be a state. Given the reality of sociocultural diversity in many of the world's polities, this widespread belief seems to us to be misguided and indeed dangerous since, as we shall argue, many successful democratic states in the world today do not conform to this expectation. All independent democratic states have a degree of cultural diversity, but for comparative purposes we can say that states may be divided into three broad categories: 1) States that have strong cultural diversity, some of which is territorially based and politically articulated by significant groups with leaders who advance claims of independence in the name of nationalism and self-determination. 2) States that are culturally quite diverse, but whose diversity is nowhere organized by territorially based, politically significant groups that mobilize nationalist demands for independence.
Journal of Democracy, 2012
For its conceptual innovation, erudition, and real-world applicability, this book deserves to be widely read. It helps us to reconfigure the debate on the relationship between ethnic diversity and political institutions. The authors tell us that the goal of their analysis is "to expand our collective political imaginations" (p. xiv) about how to combine democracy and ethnic diversity. They have brilliantly succeeded in meeting that goal. At the core of the book is the idea of the "state-nation." The authors contrast this concept with the more familiar notion of the "nation-state," as well as with others such as "multicultural states." Empirical illustrations come primarily from India, but reflections on the experiences, institutions, and practices of Belgium, Canada, Spain, Sri Lanka, Ukraine, and the United States make clear the argument's larger relevance. The concept of the state-nation is deployed to explain why some states fail in crafting national unity, while others succeed. A nation-state, as Ernest Gellner explained in his 1983 classic Nations and Nationalism, is a place where the territorial boundaries of a state and the cultural boundaries of a nation coincide. Modern France is viewed as the best historical example of such fusion. In the current literature on nationalism, however, the French model of undifferentiated citizenship is viewed as a nineteenth-century curiosity, to be studied primarily to understand why the Basques and Bretons did not rebel against Paris and
A Nation-State is the idea of a homogenous nation governed by its own sovereign state-where each state contains one nation. A nation-state is a political unit with a well-defined territory, inhabited by a people who are well organised, possess sufficient powers and consider themselves to be a nation by virtue of certain binding factors which may be emotional and which are reflected in law and governance. A state shows greater permanence and stability when it corresponds closely with a nation. State, then, is the mechanism through which the welfare of the nation is safeguarded and its identity is preserved. In an ideal nation-state, the language problem is almost absent, allegiance to institutions is general and the minorities are
Stokke, K. (2017). Nation-state. In N. Castree, W. Liu, M. Goodchild, R. Marston and A. Kobayashi (eds.), The International Encyclopedia of Geography: People, the Earth, Environment, and Technology. London and Washington D.C.: Wiley and the Association of American Geographers.
Mangal Research Journal , 2020
The wave of globalization and the impossibility to maintain uniformity within the nation-state, which in itself is characterized by diversities, has reframed the past status of nation-state in the contemporary globe. In this article, the author considers the scopes and strengths of nation-state are diminishing in the contemporary global order, arguing that the pervasive implications of globalization and the emergence of dissident voices within the specific geo-political territories have posed pragmatic problems in the traditional notion and stand strand of nation-state. As globalization has opened newer avenues with wider spaces of opportunities to the people all across the globe, the culture, tradition, religion, language, emotional affinity within the specified communal people, which are considered to be binding aspects of nation-state, don't sustain the same values as that used to hold in the past. The digital media and communication, advancement of transportation and the flow of knowledge and goods in the postmodern world have been key instruments to the people to transcend national boundary and promote the cross country affinity. Besides, this paper also explores and analyses how an effort to maintain uniformity in structure within particular political geography fails due to its undeniable reality of socio-cultural and economic variations among people within the same territory. If the uniformity and harmony, as assumed, are synonymous to nation-state, why are many countries suffering with civil wars? Hence, this paper attempts to record the practical problems which have created questions on traditionally elated space and scope of nation-state. Moreover, to examine and analyze this situation, the author uses qualitative method.
2016
Introduction In the contemporary United States, domestic policy is an appendage of foreign policy, specifically, the U.S. global financial position. If the U.S. is to be the leader of the New Global Regime, then its domestic sense of self must be altered. The economic system of the late 18th century was based on communal farming in certain regions, yeoman landholding, state and county independence and racial and linguistic commonalities. None of that, of course, is even remotely compatible with a global empire. Centralization, a cosmopolitan consciousness and a removal from traditional moral anchors is necessary for the consuming, rootless identity necessary to maintain a commoditybased capitalist and globalist structure, a structure, importantly, controlled by equally rootless, privately-owned entities (rather than the state, which, in the American case, is reactive and clumsy). Therefore, specific policies of the state since the second world war need to be understood in this light...
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