Nationalism Flashcards

1
Q

What is Nationalism

A

An ideology that emphasizes loyalty, devotion, or allegiance to a nation or nation-state and holds that such obligations outweigh other individual or group interests.

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2
Q

Von Herder years and context

A

1744-1803 - French revolution, American independence, American Constitution, industrial revolution.

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3
Q

Orign of Von Herders ideas

A

Formed part of the romantic reaction against rational ideas of the enlightenment

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4
Q

Von Herders principal idea

A

the role in language in society

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5
Q

Volk Geist - Von Herder

A
  • they have a common experience that binds them together.
  • echoes Rosseau’s concept of the general will.
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6
Q

world view of von herder

A
  • The world was naturally divided into nations, each one was defined by its own distinctive culture.
  • National culture is developed through historical experience and its main characteristics is a common language.
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7
Q

Von Herder book

A

Treatise on the Origin of Language 1772

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8
Q

Treatise on the Origin of Language quote

A

Has a people anything dearer than the speech of its fathers? In its speech resides its whole thought-domain, its tradition, history, religion, and the basis of life, all its heart and soul. the best culture of a people cannot be expressed through a foreign language, it thrives on the soil of a nation most beautifully

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9
Q

what is a key element of national aspiration - von herder

A
  • the defence and preservation of a threatened language
  • conservative and radical nationalists have claimed language as a justification for the forcible unity of a nation and discrimination against peoples who do not share that language
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10
Q

Rousseau years and context

A
  • 1712-78 - American independence but just misses out on French revolution.
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11
Q

Rousseau theories

A

democracy, education, and psychology, as well as on nationalism.

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12
Q

Rosseau book

A

The Social Contract 1762

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13
Q

what ideas make Rosseau a nationalist

A

patriotism and civic pride

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14
Q

Rosseau concept of a nation

A
  • A concept to which people could owe an allegiance which would hold them together. He was not only concerned with the freedom of the nation.
  • To this he wrote Considerations on the government of Poland in 1771-72. This work became something of a blueprint for future writers.
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15
Q

Political communities - rosseau

A
  • He was concerned with how political communities were created – how people might form themselves into unit’s whoosh would be capable of self-government, and which would be stable and capable of remaining united.
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16
Q

Rosseaus influence on french consitution 1791

A
  • ‘The source of all sovereignty is essentially in the nation; no body, no individual can exercise authority that does not proceed from it in plain terms.
  • The constitution went on to define French citizenship in a way never done before.
  • It therefore established a series of rights and obligations based on that citizenship.
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17
Q

General will - rosseau

A
  • Could be interpreted to mean the collective will or spirit of the nation. As such it could not be expressed through conventional democracy but would have to be embodied in the mind of a single, all-powerful individual.
  • While Rousseau almost certainly intended this device to be used for good ends, it was similar to the philosophy of a number of totalitarian rulers who used it to subjugate their people.
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18
Q

Mazzini Years and context

A

1805-72 – Reaction against the French Revolution and American independence, growth of liberalism, great reform act.

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19
Q

key idea of mazzini

A
  • republicanism
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20
Q

Mazzini organisation

A

In the 1830s he formed a movement known as ‘Young Italy’, dedicated to the overthrow of the hereditary monarchies that dominated the fragmented Italian peninsula and to replacing them with a united Italy under democratic rule, against Austrians.

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21
Q

Mazzini republicansim

A

This is an imprecise term which has been claimed by many movements throughout modern history, but it can best be described simply as a synthesis between nationalism — the desire to see a nation united and free from external domination — and popular democracy. For Mazzini and his followers, the two aspirations were indivisible.

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22
Q

Mazzini main idea

A

A nation living under hereditary rule was not a free nation at all. His inspiration was the classical Roman republic. By freeing Italy from foreign domination, by unifying the Italian people and by establishing a form of representative democracy, he hoped to create a new Rome.

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23
Q

Mazzini book

A

The Duties of Man (1860)

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24
Q

The Duties of Man quote

A

A country is not a mere territory, the territory is only its foundation; it is the sentiment of love, the sense of fellowship which binds together the sons of that territory.’ Thus he saw nationalism in terms of both territory and nationalist spirit. Some of this spirituality was based on his religious faith.

25
Q

mazzini representative democracy

A

he supported representative democracy as a political system, he saw the interests of the nation as standing above those of the individual.

26
Q

Charles Maurras years and context

A

1868 – 1952 – Franco-Prussian war, WW1, and WW2 – examples of Germany attempting to gain power over other countries specifically France.

27
Q

Impact of Maurras

A

His views remain prescient today and many of his ideas can be found within the contemporary nativist, populist wave of beliefs that flourish in the USA and various parts of Europe.

28
Q

Maurras book and idea

A

Action Française (1899) - pro-monarchy, antisemitic and anti-democratic.

29
Q

Maurras WW2

A

supported the pro-fascist Vichy regime which governed half of France on behalf of the German occupiers.

30
Q

Maurras on France

A

France had lost its greatness because of its abandonment of hereditary monarchy, its separation of church and state and its excessive attachment to democracy. His proposed remedy was the restoration of French nationalism and a stress on patriotism. He also believed that the French state and the Catholic Church should be united – very strongly reactionary.

31
Q

Maurras on freedom

A

Excessive freedom had led to a lack of respect for the authority of the state; equality had given too much power to the ignorant masses; fraternity had led French people to become too close to inferior peoples.

32
Q

proposition of Maurras

A

a return to pre-revolutionary France when the monarch and the Church imposed discipline upon the people and democracy had a very limited scope.

33
Q

Maurras main contributions to nationalism

A

was the idea that the interests and consciousness of individuals should be suppressed in favour of a collective identity, and the most powerful collective identity was integral nationalism.

34
Q

integral nationalism

A

accepts no collective identity above the nation and demands the people’s complete obedience to the ideals of the nation. It is not quite fascism, but it has a great deal in common with it.

35
Q

Marcus Garvey years and context

A

1887-1940 – WW1, height of industrial revolution, colonialism (1923 – height of British empire)

36
Q

Basis of Garvey’s beleifs

A
  • The African people were one single race who had been scattered by slavery and divided within Africa itself by colonial rule. By uniting, the black peoples would be capable of throwing off colonial rule and creating a new, free, and united Africa – Garveyism.
  • asserted that it had been a conscious policy of colonial rulers to divide the African peoples to be able to dominate them.
37
Q

Garveys book

A

Message to the People (1937)

38
Q

Message to the People quote

A

This propaganda of dis-associating Western Negroes from Africa is not a new one. For many years white propagandists have been printing tons of literature to impress scattered Ethiopia [i.e. Africa], especially that portion within their civilization, with the idea that Africa is a despised place, inhabited by savages, and cannibals, where no civilized human being should go, especially black civilized human beings. This propaganda is promulgated for the cause that is being realized today. That cause is colonial expansion for the white nations of the world.’

39
Q

Garvey as a pan-african

A

To this end he founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association, an attempt to counteract the lack of education that so many Africans and African Americans had experienced, and which was holding back their progress. He also published a journal, Negro World, to encourage black education.

40
Q

Garvey - lack emancipation movement

A

Notably Malcolm X’s Nation of Islam campaign. He was also a major inspiration behind West Indian Rastafarians from the 1950s onwards. Garvey had identified Ethiopia as the original breeding ground for human society, so it became a focus of interest in future black nationalist movements.

41
Q

Nation State

A

Political units have been described as states, empires, kingdoms etc. Cultural entities have been described as peoples, races, nations etc.

42
Q

Three key features for a strong national identity

A
  • language
  • religion
  • culture
  • ethnicity
  • geography
43
Q

Language as a part of human nature

A

Language a key aspect of culture to bind people together in an organic way - provides a way of communicating thoughts. Language indicates a long common history e.g. Germans, French, Italians.

44
Q

Religion as a part of human nature

A

nationality defined by religious identity. Also a number of Islamic leaders tried to synthesise and religion e.g. Gadaffi in Libya.

45
Q

Culture as a part of human nature

A
  • culture involves a shared history e.g. British - a multinational people made up of a number of ethnic groups. Brit sense of cultural identity binds them together - traditions in the arts, pride in history, strong set of values all can be attached
46
Q

Ethnicity as a part of human nature

A

biological divisions not always translated into national differences, but often do Strongly ethnic nations include Chinese, Japanese.

47
Q

Geography as a part of human nature

A

people who have occupied a specific territory and long attachment to it e.g. Jewish people - Zionism, Russians and motherland.

48
Q

collective identity

A

relates to the organic unity of the nation

49
Q

liberal cultural nationalism

A

flourishes when a people reel their distinctive culture is threatened by a more dominant culture - they seek that their separate identity is respected and protected - e.g. Welsh nationalists wish to see their culture and language protected.

50
Q

ultra conservative nationalism

A

Ultra-conservative nationalism wants to see their culture strengthened not just the interests of cultural survival but because they see their national characteristics as being superior to others eg militarism and expansionism eg Serbian nationalism between the wars.

51
Q

racialism

A

Belief that racial distinctions are the most important form of national identity. When believed that one race in a nation should be favoured over others it can be described as nativism.

52
Q

Racism

A

When a racial group feels superior to others and it’s translating this prejudice into discrimination or oppression this can be racism. Racism can be both a state of mind and a political movement eg Nazis, Afrikaner nationalism in South Africa and apartheid. Racism based on tribal distinctions, is a common feature of African states. (Rwanda tribal war between Tutsis, and Hutu)

53
Q

the state - self determination

A

Idea of self-determination of peoples arose from the Enlightenment e.g. JJ Rousseau as a reaction against absolute monarchy and inspired revolutionary activity e.g. USA and France. In the 19th century many peoples seeking liberation from imperial powers used self-determination as inspiration e.g. South America, Europe. In the 20th century, post WW1 Woodrow Wilson

54
Q

patriotism

A

refers to pride in one’s state as a political identity, nationalism refers to strong identification with one’s nation. Sometimes they come together e.g. S Africa under Mandela and the Rainbow Nation - different national groupings came together to create new national identity based on diversity.

55
Q

Society - civic nationalism

A
  • Aims to create a new form of national identity where it does not exist. E.g. USA – national identity is less important than the people’s pride in the political institutions of the state. These values are usually associated with liberal ideals e.g. USA love of the Presidency and constitution in a spiritual way.
  • Civic nationalism has also become an issue in states where there has been much recent immigration e.g. UK, France, Germany - immigrants encouraged to learn and support national civic values e.g. citizenship test.
56
Q

Society - liberal internationalism

A
  • insist that states which do not conform to liberal principles are not members of the international community of nations.
  • a belief that liberalism is an absolute human value which should be exported to other countries whenever possible.
57
Q

Society - socialist internationalism

A
  • A capitalist invention to distract the working class and which inhibits them from achieving class consciousness. - Pure socialists have objected to nationalism because the working class from different countries have a common cause that transcends national identity.
  • Nationalism is therefore only tolerated by socialists if it is closely allied with working class aspirations.
58
Q

Socialist nationalism

A
  • Socialist nationalism has mainly thrived in Africa e.g. Nyerere in Tanzania, Mugabe in Zimbabwe all sought to establish socialism in their countries in order to combat international capitalist imperialism.
  • Castro in Cuba is the key example of a leader who sought to unite a people behind a collectivist economic system when there had been a weak sense of national identity previously.
  • Unfortunately in Cuba this led to people who questioned socialism being seen as unpatriotic and ultimately ended in a tyrannical form of ultra-nationalism
59
Q

Nativism and protectionism

A
  • Nativists believe that the original national group should have economic priority over other groups
  • Also that domestic industries should be protected from international competition (protectionism) by using trade barriers.
  • Also immigration should be controlled to protect the native population.
  • an ultra-conservative, regressive form of nationalism which is backward looking. It seeks to halt the progression of globalisation esp. free trade. Has grown to be a sig force in USA - Trump - and Europe - Le Pen - and stands in direct oppo to liberal internationalism.