Theories of Nationalism
Theories of Nationalism
Theories of Nationalism
Basic Arguments
nationalism is a form of politics
nationalism is treated as a state of mind, as expression of national
consciousness, as political doctrine elaborated by intellectuals –
BREUILLY THINKS THIS IS MISLEADING BECAUSE NATIONALISM IS A
FORM OF POLITICS
to focus on culture, identity, ideology, class or modernisation is to
neglect the fundamental point that nationalism is, above and beyond
all else, about politics and that politics is about power
power in the modern world is principally about control of the state
the central task is to relate nationalism to the objectives of obtaining
and using state power
Introduction
Three paradoxes:
o Objective modernity of nations to a historians eye vs. their
subjective antiquity in the eyes of nationalists
o Formal universality of nationality as a sociocultural concept – in
the modern world everyone has a nationality like everyone has a
gender etc.
o The ‘political’ power of nationalisms vs. their philosophical
poverty and even incoherence
Anderson’s definition ‘it is an imagined political community – and
imagined as both inherently limited and sovereign
It is imagined because the members of even the smallest nation will
never know most of their fellow members yet in the mind of each lives
the image of their communion
The nation imagined is limited because even the largest of them,
encompassing perhaps a billion living humans, has finite, if elastic,
boundaries, beyond which lie other nations – no nation imagines itself
to include all of mankind
Imagined as sovereign because the concept was born at a time when
enlightenment and revolution were destroying legitimacy of the
divinely ordained, hierarchical dynastic realm – the gauge and emblem
of this freedom is the sovereign state
It is an imagined community because regardless of the actual
inequality and exploitation that may prevail in each, the nation is
always conceived as a deep horizontal comradeship