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Contents


Nationalism

Nationalism was the most successful political force of the 19th century.  It emerged from two main sources: the Romantic exaltation of "feeling" and "identity" [see Herder above all on this] and the Liberal requirement that a legitimate state be based on a "people" rather than, for example, a dynasty, God, or imperial domination. Both Romantic "identity nationalism" and Liberal "civic nationalism" were essentially middle class movements. There were two main ways of exemplification: the French method of "inclusion" - essentially that anyone who accepted loyalty to the civil French state was a "citizen". In practice this meant the enforcement of a considerable degree of uniformity, for instance the destruction of regional languages. The US can be seen to have, eventually, adopted this ideal of civic inclusive nationalism. The German method, required by political circumstances, was todefine the "nation" in ethnic terms. Ethnicity in practice came down to speaking German and (perhaps) having a German name. For the largely German-speaking Slavic  middle classes of Prague, Agram etc. who took up the nationalist ideal, the ethnic aspect became even more important than it had been for the Germans. It is debateable whether, in practice,  all nationalisms ended up as Chauvinistic and aggressive, but the very nature of nationalism requires that boundaries be drawn. Unless these boundaries are purely civic, successful nationalism, in many cases produced a situation in which substantial groups of outsiders were left within "nation-states".

  • WEB Nationalism Links [At nl.net]
  • Nationalism and Music [At this Site]
    A multimedia exploration of themes in the developmental stages of nationalism.
  • Voltaire (1694-1778): Patrie, in The Philosophical Dictionary, 1752 [At this Site]
    Voltaire's attack on national chauvinism - and his views than people should be citizens of the world. It was this view that was rejected by nationalists.
  • Analyses
  • Non-National Forms of Government

Back to Index

Cultural Nationalism: The Nation as  Positive Focus of Identity

Back to Index

Liberal Nationalism: The Nation as a Basis for Liberal Democracy

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Triumphal Nationalism: The Nation as a Claim to Superiority

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NOTES:

Dates of accession of material added since July 1998 can be seen in the New Additions page.. The date of inception was 9/22/1997.

Links to files at other site are indicated by [At some indication of the site name or location]. Locally available texts are marked by [At this Site].

WEB indicates a link to one of small number of high quality web sites which provide either more texts or an especially valuable overview.


Since September 22, 1997, this site has been accessed  times
[the counter is approximate since it only records graphical hits.]

The Internet Modern History Sourcebook is part of the
Internet History Sourcebooks Project.

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created 1997: last revised 5/1/2001