Making sense of collectivity : ethnicity, nationalism and globalization
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Making sense of collectivity : ethnicity, nationalism and globalization
(Interpreting the modern world)
Pluto Press, 2002
- : hbk
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The collapse of the Cold War, the development of new technologies and the globalisation of the world economy have all had a dramatic impact on societies across the globe.
Migration, new types of wars and changing borders mean that even the stability and security of nation-states has become a thing of the past. New nationalisms, new social movements and the resurgence of identity politics all indicate that we are entering a new era where the very notion of collective identity, through nation states or through transnational identity culture, is challenged.
This volume examines concepts of collective identity, how they are changing and what this means for our future. With contributions from distinguished sociologists including Jenkins, Eisenstadt, Rex, Bauman and Hall, it gives a radical new overview of collectivity theory - a topic that lies at the heart of sociology, anthropology and political science.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Idea of Collectivity by Mark Haugaard and Sinisa Malesevic
1. Different Societies? Different Cultures? Problems in the Conceptualisation of Collectivity by Richard Jenkins
2. The Construction of Collective Identities and the Continual Reconstruction of Primordiality by S.N. Eisenstadt
3. John Rex - The Fundamentals of the Theory of Ethnicity
4. Nationalism and Modernity by Mark Haugaard
5. The Morphogenesis of Nation by Gordana Uzelac
6. Cultural Variety or Variety of Cultures? by Zygmunt Bauman
7. A Disagreement about Difference by John Hall
8. Identity: Conceptual, Operational and Historical Critique by Sinisa Malesevic
Notes on Contributors
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"