Title: Nationalism Lecture 3: Theories I
1NationalismLecture 3 Theories I
- Prof. Lars-Erik Cederman
- Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH)
- Center for Comparative and International Studies
(CIS) Seilergraben 49, Room G.2 - lcederman_at_ethz.ch
- http//www.icr.ethz.ch/teaching/nationalism
- Assistant Kimberly Sims, CIS, Room E 3,
k-sims_at_northwestern.edu
2Theories of nationalismMain Debates
Nationalist primordialism
Anti-nationalist ideology
Essentialism
Constructivism
Perennialism
Modernism
3Essentialism
Ethnic cores
See Cederman, Nationalism and Bounded
Integration
4Essentialism
- Essentialism claims that nations are based on
ancient cultural raw material and that there is
a one-to-one correspondence between ethnic cores
and national identities. - Variations
- Primordialism holds that the nation is natural
- Perennialism contends that the nation is
pre-modern - Methodological essentialism reifies the nation
for analytical reasons
5Constructivism
Cultural Raw Material
Political Identities
Selection Mobilization
Ethnic boundaries
6Constructivism
- Constructivism argues that national identities
are actively invented and modified by nationalist
entrepreneurs selecting and mobilizing cultural
traits for political purposes. - Variations
- Instrumentalism
- Bounded-institutionalist theories
7Bounded Institutionalism
Cultural Raw Material
Political Identities
Institutional lock-in
8Gellners constructivism
- Targets
- Nationalist primordialism Sleeping Beauty
- Perennialism Dark Gods Theory
- Anti-nationalist ideologies (Marxism
Liberalism) Wrong-Address Theory - Gellners response
- Nations are not natural
- Nations are not old
- Nationalism is an integrated part of modernity
and cannot be wished away
Ernest Gellner
9Gellners philosophy of history
Industrial Society
Pre-Agrarian Society
Agrarian Society
Agro-literate polity with horizontal elite on
top and insulated peasant communities at the
bottom
Vertically integrated large- scale society
unified by culture
Stateless society
10The logic of nationalism
- High culture replaces structure (Thought and
Change, 1964) - Key to high culture educational system
- Not the guillotine, but the doctorat détat is
the main tool and symbol of state power. The
monopoly of legitimate education is more
important, more central than the monopoly of
legitimate violence.
11Gellners typology
Center No education
Education
Pre-nationalist situation
Ethnic nationalism
Periphery No education Education
Classical liberal nationalism
Diaspora nationalism