000 01370nam a2200205Ia 4500
999 _c216131
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020 _a9780521576499
082 _a320.54 BRU
100 _a"Brubaker, Rogers"
245 0 _aNationalism reframed
260 _aCambridge
260 _bCambridge University Press
260 _c2007
300 _a202p.
365 _dPND
520 _aThe 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'.
650 _a"Nationalism-Europe, Eastern"
942 _cB
_2ddc