Anderson - Imagined Communities
Tags: books
Summary
- All nations are imagined because not everyone will meet every other community
- Print capitalism has helped shape imagined communities
- Fall of Latin, and the subsequent accessibility of knowledge allowed citizens to feel in touch with their fellow country members
- “Hegel observed that newspapers serve modern man as a subsitute for morning prayer” - Page 35
- Fall of Latin, and the subsequent accessibility of knowledge allowed citizens to feel in touch with their fellow country members
- Community because the nation is always conecived as a horizontal comradeship
- Loosening of 3 axioms allowed for the rise of imagined communities:
- Language was more accessible
- Homo sacer type soveriegnty, where society was organized around more than elites
- Unification of the conception of the temporal - We all even agree to see the same history, although with different interpretations
- Capitalism fueled this expansion
- Print, once it became capitalized, sought to move to greater consumers
- Inital educated elites were too small
- Expanded to working professionals
- In the two decades 1520-1540 three times as many books were published compared to 1500-1520
- Print, once it became capitalized, sought to move to greater consumers
- “Official Nationalism” - Nationalisms sponsered by the state
- Egypt Iron and Steel Company ?
- Created directly in response to the European nationalisms of the 1820’s
- Can be constructed “states in which the ruling classes or leading elements in them felt threatened by the world wide spread of nationally imagined community”
- Sati’ Al husri?
- Core of the nations in the case of Hungarian, English, and Japanese emerged as instincitvely resistant to foreign rule
- Bilingualism made the intellgensia powerful in colonized nations
- “Educational policies pursued by the indochina colonial government gave birth to an indochinese consciousness” - page 124
- Languages should not be treated as emblems of nationalism like flags or anthems, but rather sources of nationalism
- Variety of Kurdish languages
- Differences in Arabic dialects
- “Nationalism thinks in terms of historical destinies, while racism dreams of eternal contaminations” - p 149
- Official nationalism often co-opts levers of power - p 160
Links to this note
- al-Husri
- Blumi - Ottoman Refugees, 1878-1939
- Chaterjee - The Nations and Its Fragments
- DiCapua - Gatekeepers of the Arab Past
- Hinnebusch - Identity and State Formation in Multi‐sectarian Societies
- Nagel, Ferran - Politics of Religion and Nationalism
- Nationalism and Outsiders in the Middle East - Midterm Draft
- Saunders - The Ummah as a Nation: A reappraisal in the wake of the 'Cartoons Affair'
- Simon - Imposition of Nationalism on Non-Nation State