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基本説明
Aviel Roshwald challenges prevailing assumtions about the exclusively modern and transitory nature of nationalism in a study that ranges from ancient Jews and Greeks to the modern Arab-Islaeli, Northern Irish, and Yugoslav conflicts, and from the politics of Jerusalem's Temple Mount to the contested memory of the Alamo in Texas.
Full Description
Aviel Roshwald directly challenges prevalent scholarly orthodoxies about the exclusively modern character of nationalism. He argues that nationalism's enduring power to shape the world we live in arises directly out of its position at the heart of inescapable social and political paradoxes that are not only fundamental to the modern experience, but many of whose roots can be traced back into ancient history. Modern nationalisms, the author contends, cannot be fully understood without first examining their ancient counterparts and archetypes. Deploying a broad array of historical and contemporary case studies (ranging from ancient Jewish nationalism to the contemporary Israeli-Palestinian conflict, from the nationalist politics of ancient Greece to the contested memory of the Alamo, and from the Yugoslav wars to Northern Ireland's Orange Parades) the author argues that a responsible politics of nationalism depends upon a forthright acknowledgement of the deep-seated and intrinsically insoluble dilemmas that inhere in it.
Contents
Introduction; 1. Nationalism in antiquity; 2. The nation in history and the curved arrow of time; 3. Violation and volition; 4. Chosenness and mission; 5. Kindred blood, mingled blood - ethnic and civic frameworks of national identity; Conclusion; Bibliography.