Nationalism: Five Roads to ModernityHarvard University Press, 1992 - 581 pagina's Nationalism is a movement and a state of mind that brings together national identity, consciousness, and collectivities. It accomplished the great transformation from the old order to modernity; it placed imagination above production, distribution, and exchange; and it altered the nature of power over people and territories that shapes and directs the social and political world. A five-country study that spans five hundred years, this historically oriented work in sociology bids well to replace all previous works on the subject. The theme, simple yet complex, suggests that England was the front-runner, with its earliest sense of self-conscious nationalism and its pragmatic ways; it utilized existing institutions while transforming itself. The Americans followed, with no formed institutions to impede them. France, Germany, and Russia took the same, now marked, path, modifying nationalism in the process. |
Inhoudsopgave
England | 27 |
and the Protestant Reformation | 44 |
A Land of Experimental Knowledge | 78 |
The Three Identities of France | 89 |
The Social Bases of the Nationalization of French Identity | 133 |
Russia | 189 |
of Russian Nationalism | 250 |
The Dangerous Class | 293 |
The Preparation of the Mold | 310 |

