search for books and compare prices
Tables of Contents for Nationalism and Modernism
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Preface
x
 
Introduction: The modernist paradigm
1
7
The rise and decline of nationalism?
1
1
The rise and decline of modernism?
2
3
Aims and plan
5
3
1 The rise of classical modernism
8
17
The roots of classical modernism
9
9
The classical modernist paradigm of nationalism
18
7
PART I Varieties of modernism
25
118
2 The culture of industrialism
27
20
`Nation' and `nationalism'
29
1
Agroliterate and industrial societies
30
2
From `low' to `high' cultures
32
3
Nationalism and industrialism
35
2
Nationalism and `high cultures'
37
2
Nationalism and public education
39
2
Nationalism and historical continuity
41
4
Nationalism and the ethnic past
45
2
3 Capitalism and nationalism
47
23
Imperialism and uneven development
49
2
Populism and romanticism
51
2
`Nationalism-producing' development?
53
2
The social base of nationalism
55
2
Internal colonialism
57
4
Ethno-regionalism
61
2
Elite strategies of `rational choice'
63
3
Interest and passion
66
4
4 State and nation
70
27
Sources of political modernism
70
1
The reflexive state
71
2
The nation beyond the state
73
3
Nations and the inter-state order
76
3
The state and war
79
3
A political theory of nationalism?
82
2
State and society: bridging the gulf?
84
5
Identity and politics
89
2
Intellectuals and nationalist ideology
91
1
Political modernism and ethnic history
92
2
Conclusion
94
3
5 Political messianism
97
20
`Political religion'
97
2
Marginal youth
99
2
The cult of the `dark gods'
101
2
A millennial opiate
103
3
Colonialism and the intellectuals
106
3
Millennialism and progress
109
3
The religion of history
112
5
6 Invention and imagination
117
26
Inventing nations
117
8
Ethnic and civic nationalisms?
125
2
`Proto-national' bonds
127
2
The nation as construct?
129
2
Imagining the nation
131
5
An imagined community?
136
2
Print-capitalism and re-presentation
138
2
Mass self-sacrifice
140
3
PART II Critics and alternatives
143
78
7 Primordialism and perennialism
145
25
Primordialism I: inclusive fitness
146
5
Primordialism II: cultural givens
151
2
The instrumentalist critique
153
6
Perennialism I: ethnic continuity
159
2
Perennialism II: perennial ethnicity, modern nations
161
4
The psychology of ethnic affiliation
165
2
The immemorial nation?
167
3
8 Ethno-symbolism
170
29
`Old, continuous' nations
170
3
Pre-modern nations?
173
4
Cultural and political nationalism
177
4
Myth-symbol complexes
181
2
A framework of national emergence
183
2
Culture and the border
185
2
`Dual legitimation'
187
3
Ethnies and ethno-symbolism
190
3
Origins and types of nation
193
3
Ethno-symbolism considered
196
3
9 Beyond modernism?
199
22
Polyethnicity, past and future
199
2
The post-national agenda
201
1
Fragmentation and hybrid identities
202
3
Gender and nation
205
5
Liberalism and civic or ethnic nationalism
210
3
Nationalism and globalisation
213
3
National identity and supra-nationalism
216
2
Beyond modernism?
218
3
Conclusion: problems, paradigms and prospects
221
8
Problems
221
1
Paradigms
222
3
Prospects
225
4
Notes
229
15
Bibliography
244
20
Index
264