Structures of Nationalism
The article reviews briefly the theory of nationalism, and introduces (yet another) definition of nations and nationalism. Starting from this definition of nationalism as a world order with specific characteristics, oppositions such as core and periphery, globalism/nationalism, and realism/idealism are formally rejected. Nationalism is considered as a purely global structure. Within this, it is suggested, the number of states tends to fall to an equilibrium number which is itself falling, this number of states being the current best approximation to a single world state. Within nationalism variants are associated with different equilibrium numbers: these variants compete. Together, as the nationalist structure, they formally exclude other world orders. Such a structure appears to have the function of blocking change, and it is tentatively suggested that it derives directly from an innate human conservatism. The article attempts to show how characteristics of classic nationalism, and more recent identity politics, are part of nationalist structures. They involve either the exclusion of other forms of state, or of other orders of states, or the intensification of identity as it exists.
Year of publication: |
1997-03-31
|
---|---|
Authors: | Treanor |
Published in: |
Sociological Research Online. - Sociological Research Online. - Vol. 2.1997, 1, p. 8-8
|
Publisher: |
Sociological Research Online |
Subject: | Culture | Globalism | Identity | Innovation | Multiculturalism | Nation State | Nationalism | Structuralism |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Centre for the Study of Public Policy
Munro, Neil, (1997)
-
Using Metadata for Cross-National Comparisons
Brannen, Peter, (1997)
-
Is Israel one? : religion, nationalism, and multiculturalism confounded
Ben-Refael, Eli×ezer, (2005)
- More ...