Nationalism
Titre:
Nationalism
PERSONAL_AUTHOR_EPSB:
Sommaire:
Achieving prevalence as an ideology in the political and social ferment of late 18th-century Europe and America, nationalism first found expression during the course of such historical upheavals as the American and French Revolutions. Its founders and early sponsors--Rousseau, Herder, Fichte, Korais, and Mazzini--looked to nationalism as the manifestation of modern humanity's most essential aspirations: autonomy, unity, identity. Born of notions regarding popular freedom and sovereignty that had been gathering momentum for generations, it conjured up images of a modernizing West at once hungry for change and yearning for a return to age-old concepts of fraternity and ancient heritage. Since that time nationalism, having taken on countless different dimensions, remains a vital and dynamic force for change--whether for good or otherwise. "Nationalism" gathers under one cover an impressive array of writing on everything from imagined communities to ethno-regional movements. In no other volume will students of politics, history, sociology, anthropology, international relations, and cultural studies have access to such a definitive appraisal of one of the modern world's most influential--and explosive--ideas.
Date de publication comme intervalle:
1994
SERIES_EPSB:
Description matérielle:
xi, 378 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Terme de vedette-matière:
Numéro international normalisé des livres (ISBN):
9780192892607
Informations de publication:
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1994.