ISBN:
9780511558764
Language:
English
Pages:
1 online resource (xi, 202 pages)
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
DDC:
320.5/4/0947
Keywords:
Geschichte 1900-2000
;
Geschichte 1989-1998
;
Geschichte
;
Nationalismus
;
Politik
;
Nationalism / Europe, Eastern
;
Nationalism / Soviet Union / Republics
;
Nationalism / Europe
;
Politik
;
Postkommunismus
;
Nationalstaat
;
Nationalismus
;
Nationalitätenfrage
;
Europa
;
Sowjetunion
;
Europe, Eastern / Politics and government / 1989-
;
Former Soviet republics / Politics and government
;
Europe / Politics and government / 20th century
;
Osteuropa
;
Europa
;
Osteuropa
;
Nationalismus
;
Geschichte 1989-1998
;
Europa
;
Nationalismus
;
Nationalstaat
;
Osteuropa
;
Nationalitätenfrage
;
Nationalstaat
;
Politik
;
Geschichte
;
Postkommunismus
Abstract:
The birthplace of the nation-state and modern nationalism at the end of the eighteenth century, Europe was supposed to be their graveyard at the end of the twentieth. Yet, far from moving beyond the nation-state, fin-de-siècle Europe has been moving back to the nation-state, most spectacularly with the disintegration of the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia into a score of nationally defined successor states. This massive reorganisation of political space along national lines has engendered distinctive, dynamically interlocking, and in some cases explosive forms of nationalism. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu and the 'new institutionalist' sociology, and comparing contemporary nationalisms with those of interwar Europe, Rogers Brubaker provides a theoretically sophisticated and historically rich account of one of the most important problems facing the 'New Europe'
Description / Table of Contents:
1. Rethinking nationhood: nation as institutionalized form, practical category, contingent event -- 2. Nationhood and the national question in the Soviet Union and its successor states: an institutionalist account -- 3. National minorities, nationalizing states, and external national homelands in the New Europe -- 4. Nationalizing states in the old "New Europe" -- and the new -- 5. Homeland nationalism in Weimar Germany and "Weimar Russia" -- 6. Aftermaths of empire and the unmixing of peoples
Note:
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015)
DOI:
10.1017/CBO9780511558764
URL:
Volltext
(URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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