25 results on '"Nationalism"'
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2. Kosovo's Competing Nationalisms: Theorizing an Internal Challenge to Rebel Victor Legitimacy.
- Author
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Toman Grief, Isaac
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *NATION building , *PEACEBUILDING , *LEGITIMATION (Sociology) - Abstract
This article highlights the significance of Lëvizja Vetëvendosje's (LVV) left-wing Kosovar Albanian nationalist challenge to the authoritarian and patrimonial nationalist system of Kosovo's rebel victors. LVV used the political settlement's own legitimizing metanarrative – that of Kosovar Albanian nationalism – to bolster their own legitimacy while undermining that of post-war elites drawn from organizations active in the conflict of the 1990s. A methodology based on Discursive Institutionalism makes sense of LVV's position as both a challenger of rebel victors but also as a representative of the same ideological culture that underpins Kosovo's political culture. There are two key contributions here. Empirically, this study characterizes LVV as a nationalist challenge to the rebel victor parties rather than as a distinctively nationalist or a protest party. The second contribution is theoretical: peacebuilding and political settlements theories must take a more dynamic and agency-sensitive view of legitimacy creation than they have hitherto. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Slivovitz and Everyday Nationalism: The Analysis of Slovene Newspapers in Interwar Yugoslavia.
- Author
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Mlekuž, Jernej
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *MATERIAL culture , *INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) , *NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
By analyzing selected Slovene newspapers, the article discusses the role of slivovitz in the reproduction of everyday nationalism in interwar Yugoslavia. The article is based on an analysis of texts containing the word slivovka (the Slovene word for slivovitz or plum spirit) that appeared in three major Slovene newspapers and three minor Slovene pro-Yugoslav newspapers in the period 1919–1945. In the period in question, slivovitz did not (yet) have the role of a signifier of the Yugoslav state, the Yugoslav nation and other elements associated with Yugoslav identity, but it was becoming part of the "structure of national feeling" – the specific experience of life in a given time and place that was common to the Yugoslav nation. Slivovitz, frequently included in repetitive and everyday habits, practices and assumptions, began to define the Yugoslav nation through a specific culture of drinking and drinks and became a component of this everyday, largely unnoticed reproduction of the Yugoslav nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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4. Investing in Infants: Child Protection and Nationalism in Transylvania during Dualism and the Interwar Period.
- Author
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Gál, Edina
- Subjects
- *
INFANT mortality , *CHILD welfare , *NATIONALISM , *INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) , *MOTHERHOOD , *MEDICALIZATION , *VISITING nurses - Abstract
The high infant mortality rate of illegitimate children in Dualist Hungary urged politicians to create a modern state child welfare system for the protection of abandoned children whose upbringing became a national matter. Their main concern was providing adequate nutrition for infants and increase their chances of survival. The article examines how demographical concerns and national-political ideals influenced the evolution of the child welfare system in multi-ethnic Transylvania, first as part of the dual monarchy and after the First World War as a province of Romania. The Hungarian state children's asylums offered a variety of nursing programs for abandoned infants, where the foster-care system often resulted in their Magyarization at a later age. During the First World War, the new objective was the protection of infants together with mothers and the promotion of breastfeeding in order to ensure the viability of the Hungarian nation. National arguments were used in both time periods to support infant protection initiatives. In interwar Transylvania, the urban-rural ethnic distribution influenced the development of infant protection facilities: all state investments were channeled toward the "authentic" Romanian countryside, while in the "foreign" urban environment ethnic minorities focused on their own institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Failing to Fight for the "Russian World": Pre-War Social Origins of the Pro-Russian Secessionist Organizations in Ukraine.
- Author
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Laryš, Martin
- Subjects
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RUSSIA-Ukraine Conflict, 2014- , *RUSSIA-Ukraine relations , *INSURGENCY , *IDEOLOGY , *NATIONALISM - Abstract
The existing literature explains the war in Donbas and the rationale for why conflict broke out there while failing to do so in other Ukrainian provinces, such as Odesa or Kharkiv. Local pro-Russian organizations could not attract considerable attention and support in the pre-war period in all parts of Ukraine, except for Crimea. The social marginalization and negligible influence of the pro-Russian organizations among the locals presumably stemmed from their weak social ties among the local population. The question is why they had such weak social embeddedness in the local societies despite relatively popular pro-Russian sympathies in these regions? Surprisingly, nobody has sought to explain the social origins of the pro-Russian movements as a source of their weakness and failure to be sparked by the anti-Ukrainian rebellion in 2014. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Hyphenated Identities: Voices from the Watchtower During the Cypriot Civil War.
- Author
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Lamnisos, Tasos
- Subjects
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ETHNONATIONALISM , *NATIONAL character , *NATIONALISM , *FRAMES (Social sciences) , *DISCOURSE analysis , *CIVIL war ,HISTORY of Cyprus - Abstract
As an implication of the ethnically and nationally diverse nature of Mediterranean polities, identification-driven boundary-making strategies bear considerable relevance for their political processes, both in the contemporary context and in the historical past. By utilizing a Discourse-Historical Approach (DHA), this study provides an interpretative exploration of Greek-Cypriot elite discursive framing strategies regarding Turkish-Cypriot and Greek-Cypriot ethno-national identity during the Cypriot Civil War (1963–1967). The available historical interpretations of this period lead us to expect an exclusionary strategy of boundary contraction to be more prevalent than the inclusionary one of boundary expansion in the discourse of Greek-Cypriot elites. Through an examination of a sample of primary textual sources, the analysis disconfirms such an expectation, as elite figures primarily constructed broader, inclusive frames of ethno-national identity during the civil war. The relative absence of boundary contraction and the prevalence of boundary expansion indicate the applicability of Wimmer's (2008) universalist approach to ethnic boundary-making, in contrast to the expectations that are built by the Cyprus-specific historical evidence. This study thus lays the groundwork for future research to delineate the discursive framing strategies of elite figures in Cyprus and beyond the ethno-nationally divided island. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Finno-Ugric Identity in Estonia: Visual and Discursive Analysis.
- Author
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Makarychev, Andrey, Terry, George Spencer, and Siva, Sami
- Subjects
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FINNO-Ugrians , *NATIONALISM , *POLITICS & culture , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
This article seeks to discover how this contemporary Finno-Ugric identity has been politically instrumentalized and negotiated in Estonia. First, we look at how the Estonian state engages with the concept of Finno-Ugric world and inscribes it into Estonia's foreign policy goals. Then, we delve into the role of Finno-Ugric traditionalism in Estonian populist and far-right discourses. Third, we discuss how local identity constitutes and cements community building initiatives and projects in the Seto region known for its local specificity and cultural peculiarity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Nationalism and Inequality Scholarship in the Age of Populism: Bringing Territory Back In?
- Author
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Yusupova, Guzel and Matveev, Ilia
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *EQUALITY , *POPULISM , *CITIZENSHIP , *ECONOMICS & politics - Abstract
The intersection of nationalism and inequality is undoubtedly gaining interest in current debates in nationalism studies. The effects of economic inequalities on nationalist politics are the most researched area; however, there are other ways to explore the relationship between nationalism and inequality. Focusing on economic and political aspects of inequality this state-of-the-field article offers an overview of existing research on the relationship between inequality and nationalism in various areas of nationalism studies, ranging from nationalist politics to exploring the symbolic construction of nationhood. Following the inequality scholars, we highlight the growing importance of capital accumulation and emphasize the spatial aspect of it. We argue that while being largely overlooked, the role of territory—and territorial politics more broadly—becomes crucial for the understanding of the intersection of nationalism and inequality today. Overall, we show that it is necessary for nationalism studies scholars to engage in contemporary literature on inequality and acknowledge the wider implications of growing inequality to various manifestations of nationalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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9. NPS volume 52 issue 2 Cover and Front matter.
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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10. Unequal Citizenship and Ethnic Boundaries in the Migration Experience of Polish Roma.
- Author
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Fiałkowska, Kamila, Mirga-Wójtowicz, Elżbieta, and Garapich, Michał P.
- Subjects
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ROMANIES , *CITIZENSHIP , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *POLISH people , *SOCIAL belonging , *ETHNIC groups , *ETHNOLOGY research - Abstract
Since the early 1990s, large numbers of Polish Roma have emigrated, mainly to Germany and Great Britain. Unlike the migration of Polish (non-Roma) citizens there was an intriguing silence regarding the migration of this ethnic group. The absence of Roma in the grand narrative of migrations from Poland, as we argue, suggests that the notion of belonging and citizenship were unequally distributed among Poland's population. Based on our ongoing ethnographic research among Polish Roma migrants, complemented by an analysis of relevant documents, we argue that these inequalities and hierarchies are deeply rooted and there is an interesting continuity in how they were produced and reproduced prior to and after the 1989 regime change. We argue that one of the key factors in these movements, the collectiveness of the migration project – i.e. migrating as an extended family group as a component of the moral economy of Roma mobility – is mutually produced by unequal citizenship, mobility regimes and strong moral obligations stemming from kinship ties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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11. Frankfurt am Meer : The "Illiberal" Liberalism of the German Confederation and Its Aspirations over the Habsburg Adriatic in 1848.
- Author
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Maritan, Mario
- Subjects
- *
LIBERALISM , *NATIONALISM , *MONARCHY ,DEUTSCHE Nationalversammlung (1848-1849 : Frankfurt am Main, Germany) - Abstract
In 1848, Habsburg Trieste became the target of German nationalists gathered in Frankfurt. The Frankfurt parliament, born out of the revolutions of 1848, has been widely depicted as a liberal experience. Yet its nationalist stances, which included the creation of a unitary German state through the absorption of vast multiethnic regions of the Habsburg monarchy, whose Austrian crownlands were part of the German Confederation, bear witness to the illiberal nature of the Frankfurt parenthesis of 1848–1849. Notwithstanding the assimilatory tendencies of the Frankfurt parliament, Italian activists in Trieste supported the inclusion of the Habsburg port in an enlarged Germany, hoping to break away from Habsburg rule, which they portrayed as oppressive. This article argues that the contradictory Italian support for the German Confederation highlights the paradoxes at the basis of nationalist movements at their onset, while also pointing to the difficulty that nation-states would soon witness in dealing with other ethnic groups within their borders. On the contrary, it was the Habsburg monarchy that, in its centuries-long tradition of accommodating different ethnicities into its fold, represented what to present-day observers comes closer to political liberalism than the so-called liberal national parties that opposed Habsburg rule. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Captured City: Authoritarianism, Urban Space and Project Skopje 2014.
- Author
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Staletović, Branimir
- Subjects
- *
AUTHORITARIANISM , *NATIONALISM , *PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
This article looks at different strategies in which authoritarianism operated in relation to the redesign of Skopje during the rule of the conservative party VMRO-DPMNE and its leader Nikola Gruevski. It argues that the promoters of the urban project called "Skopje 2014" relied on a set of nondemocratic mechanisms and involvement and coordination of various individuals and institutions on all levels to implement and legitimize the project and expand its political dominance. These ranged from state-driven mechanisms and urban design strategies to contributions of non-state groups, thus demonstrating a systematic effort behind the makeover of Skopje. Examining the project through the concept of authoritarianism, the article goes beyond (methodological) nationalism to understand the complexity of the revamp of North Macedonia's capital. It also demonstrates how the party used its ideological principles to leave its enduring mark on Skopje's urban environment. Additionally, the article points out the need to study urban space politics in the context of hybrid and competitive authoritarian regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Climate Change: Bad News for Populism? How the Rassemblement National Used COVID-19 to Promote Its Environmental Agenda.
- Author
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de Nadal, Lluis
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change & politics , *PANDEMICS , *NEW right (Politics) , *POPULISM , *ENVIRONMENTALISM , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
This article uses the French Rassemblement National (RN) as a case study to examine how the populist radical right (PRR) prepares for a world after COVID-19 dominated by climate change concerns. Research suggests that certain measures introduced to contain the virus – such as the establishment of strict border and travel restrictions – may legitimize the PRR's protectionist and anti-immigration agendas, yet few have examined whether or how PRR parties have used COVID-19 to promote their environmental agenda. If anything, the expectation has been that the pandemic would hurt the PRR precisely because its effects, unlike climate change, cannot be dismissed as a "hoax." This view overlooks not only the "environmental turn" recently taken by several PRR parties but also the possibility that public awareness of the causal link between climate change and COVID-19 may work to their advantage. The analysis presented in this article highlights this possibility, showing that the RN used COVID-19 not only to capitalize on anti-immigrant sentiment but also to bolster its self-image as a champion of environmental protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Understanding Russophone Estonian Identity Through Popular Culture: An Analysis of Hip-Hop Hit "für Oksana".
- Author
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Cole, Michael
- Subjects
- *
HIP-hop culture , *VISUAL culture & politics , *ESTONIANS , *RAP musicians , *NATIONALISM , *CRITICAL discourse analysis - Abstract
Since emerging in the early 1990s, Estonian hip-hop has developed in line with other cultural and artistic projects in the country, reflecting attempts to foster a homogeneous society, yet ultimately cultivating one where diversity and multiculturalism prevail. As a genre where minority groups are frequently presented as "authentic," hip-hop and its visual and performative manifestations provide a valuable platform to examine expressions of identity. To this end, several Estonian hip-hop musicians have explored aspects of being "post-Soviet" in contradistinction to official hegemonic discourses, which outright reject the Soviet past and emphasize titular ethnicity as a cornerstone of national identity. This article uses Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and Multi-Modal Discourse Analysis (MMDA) to examine the lyrics and accompanying video of popular hip-hop song "für Oksana" by "Nublu featuring Gameboy Tetris." Doing so highlights how the song's basic narrative acts as a metaphor for experiences of integration processes between ethnic Estonians and Russophones since Estonian independence. I argue that through a combination of linguistic and cultural codeswitching, "für Oksana" constitutes an expression, performance, and negotiation of Russophone Estonian identity from both insider and outsider perspectives, emphasizing the need to understand Russophone Estonians as more than simply "Russians who live in Estonia." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Between the Czech Krkonoše and the German Riesengebirge: Nationalism and Tourism in the Giant Mountains, 1880s–1930s.
- Author
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Holubec, Stanislav
- Subjects
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MOUNTAIN tourism , *NATIONALISM , *ETHNIC conflict , *NAZI Germany, 1933-1945 ,MUNICH Four-Power Agreement (1938) - Abstract
The article deals with Czech and German nationalist discourses and practices in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as they relate to tourism in the Krkonoše/Riesengebirge, the highest Central European mountain range between the Alps and Scandinavia. It will discuss the discourses developed in relation to mountain tourism and nationalism (metaphors of battlefields, wedges, walls, gates, and bastions), different symbolical cores of mountains, and practices of tourist and nationalist organizations (tourist trails and markings, excursions, the ownership of mountains huts, languages used, memorials, and the construction of roads). It will examine how these discourses and practices changed from the first Czech-German ethnic conflicts in the 1800s until the end of interwar Czechoslovakia. Finally, it will discuss the Czech culture of defeat in the shadow of the Munich Agreement, which meant the occupation of the Giant Mountains by Nazi Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Bosnian-Herzegovinian Citizens in the Making – The Citizenship Debate in the Time of Social Mobilizations.
- Author
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Chrzová, Barbora
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENSHIP , *NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY , *RHETORIC - Abstract
Drawing upon rhetorical approaches to citizenship, this article analyzes how the contested notion of Bosnian-Herzegovinian (BiH) citizenship has been crafted on the discursive level during two series of social mobilizations taking place in 2013 and 2014. It aims to provide a better understanding of how various actors make sense of BiH citizenship. This study investigates what values were associated with citizenship, how boundaries of membership were drawn, and how the ethno-national dimension and linguistic complexities came into play. It analyzes a corpus of 150 media articles covering the protests in four major printed daily newspapers while methodologically relying on the discourse historical approach developed by Reisigl and Wodak. The analysis demonstrates that discursive articulations of citizenship are generated within the immediate context of social mobilization but are also influenced by historical legacies, institutional preconditions, regional aspects or global narratives. It shows that the decentralized institutional set up combined with the multi-layered and multidimensional meaning of citizenship blur the notion of BiH citizenship as an all-encompassing term and pose an obstacle to the formulation of an alternative vision of the BiH polity to the post-Dayton order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Testing the National Identity Argument in a Time of Crisis – Evidence from Israel.
- Author
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Ariely, Gal
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL character , *SOLIDARITY , *PANDEMICS , *NATIONALISM , *CRISIS management - Abstract
This article explores the national identity argument in unsettled times by using the COVID-19 pandemic as a test case. It uses a longitudinal survey among Jewish Israelis to examine whether the pandemic influenced levels of national identity and solidarity and whether it altered their relationship. The findings indicate a clear reduction in levels of solidarity, national attachment, and national chauvinism over time. They also show that the positive connection between national attachment and solidarity grew stronger, while the connection between national chauvinism and solidarity became weaker and insignificant. These findings provide complex evidence for the national identity argument. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Anthropology in a Nationalizing State: Three Case Studies from Interwar Poland.
- Author
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Engelking, Anna
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) , *PROPAGANDA , *NATIONAL character , *SOCIAL science research - Abstract
Three case studies depict different attitudes of anthropologists toward the politics of nationalism promoted by the prewar Polish state. Ethnographer Stanisław Dworakowski, involved in a governmental Committee for the Issues of Petty Nobility in Eastern Poland, elaborated a study on this social stratum. Although based on reliable field research, it can hardly be considered scientific work, as it has many features of political propaganda. Quite opposite is the case of folklorist Joachim Chajes, secretary of the Ethnographical Commission of YIVO. Contemporary Soviet folklore was one of the fields of his research, which Polish anticommunist and antisemitic authorities found suspicious. Accused of communist activity, he was imprisoned. Social anthropologist Józef Obrębski can be situated between those two extremes. His field research among East Slavic peasants in Eastern Poland, concerning their developing national identity, although conducted within a national scientific program and financed by the state, is an example of intellectual independence. By revealing the negative attitude of the peasants toward Polish authorities, Obrębski achieved an outcome, which did not fulfill the official political expectations. These three trajectories show competitive coexistence of the meta-field of power and the scientific field, focused on their respective stakes: power and recognition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The "Aliens" in Post-Yugoslav Cinema.
- Author
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Jaugaitė, Rimantė
- Subjects
- *
ETHNICITY in motion pictures , *NATIONALISM , *YUGOSLAV films , *WAR films , *CONTENT analysis - Abstract
This research explores how the post-Yugoslav film-makers, in particular Nebojša Slijepčević, Goran Dević, and Srđan Keča, investigate the dilemma of ethnic identity and face the cultural division in the post-conflict societies. The article aims to discuss cinematic representations of the other and conduct a deeper textual analysis of the film Srbenka (2018), in comparison to After the War (2006) and Imported Crows (2004). Also, the article bridges the gap between more conceptual literature on transnational cinema (Stephen Crofts, Steven Rawle, Saša Vojković), nationalism studies (Benedict Anderson, Rogers Brubaker, V.P. (Chip) Gagnon Jr.), as well as history (Tara Zahra) and more empirical analysis providing examples from the contemporary post-Yugoslav cinema. Therefore, the article demonstrates how applying theories from different disciplines enrich film analysis when investigating the otherness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. NPS volume 52 issue 3 Cover and Back matter.
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. NPS volume 52 issue 2 Cover and Back matter.
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Many Faces of Nationalism.
- Author
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Malešević, Siniša
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *NONFICTION - Abstract
This article reviews three recent books on nationalism, each focusing on a different aspect of this multifaceted phenomenon. Mylonas and Radnitz's volume explores the relationships between nationalism and the politics of treason, Hadžidedic's book zooms in on the historical interdependence of capitalism and nationalism, while Maxwell's historical monograph explores nationalist habitus as a form of lived experience. These three insightful contributions show the diversity and plasticity of nationalist ideology and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. NPS volume 52 issue 1 Cover and Back matter.
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *ARMENIAN genocide, 1915-1923 , *POWER (Social sciences) - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Editor's Note.
- Author
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Mylonas, Harris
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *PUBLISHING , *RESIGNATION of employees - Abstract
In the article, the author discusses developments in the journal, including the introduction of a new article type, the focus on nationalism studies, and the resignation of Associate Editor Paul Goode.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. First Nationalism Then Identity: On Bosnian Muslims and Their Bosniak Identity.
- Author
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Akar, Başak
- Subjects
- *
BOSNIANS , *NATIONALISM , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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