scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism

TLDR
In this paper, Anderson examines the creation and global spread of the 'imagined communities' of nationality and explores the processes that created these communities: the territorialisation of religious faiths, the decline of antique kingship, the interaction between capitalism and print, the development of vernacular languages-of-state, and changing conceptions of time.
Abstract
What makes people love and die for nations, as well as hate and kill in their name? While many studies have been written on nationalist political movements, the sense of nationality - the personal and cultural feeling of belonging to the nation - has not received proportionate attention. In this widely acclaimed work, Benedict Anderson examines the creation and global spread of the 'imagined communities' of nationality. Anderson explores the processes that created these communities: the territorialisation of religious faiths, the decline of antique kingship, the interaction between capitalism and print, the development of vernacular languages-of-state, and changing conceptions of time. He shows how an originary nationalism born in the Americas was modularly adopted by popular movements in Europe, by the imperialist powers, and by the anti-imperialist resistances in Asia and Africa. This revised edition includes two new chapters, one of which discusses the complex role of the colonialist state's mindset in the development of Third World nationalism, while the other analyses the processes by which all over the world, nations came to imagine themselves as old.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Yearnings: televisual love and melodramatic politics in contemporary China

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors trace the complex "passion for meaning" (Barthes) that animated the consumption and interpretation of Yearnings, a television melodrama that aired in China just a year and a half after the Tiananmen demonstrations, requires moving beyond a dichotomy between "the political" and "the popular".
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Scan: The Globalization of Advertising Agencies, Concepts, and Campaigns

Deborah Leslie
- 01 Oct 1995 - 
TL;DR: The role of the advertising industry in mediating geographic aspects of economic and cultural change is explored in this article, where a transnationalization of advertising agencies through both foreign direct investment and acquisition has concentrated control and extended the spatial reach of a few large American, Japanese, and British advertising agencies and holding companies in the 1980s and 1990s.
Journal ArticleDOI

We-ness and Welfare: A Longitudinal Analysis of Social Development in Kerala, India

TL;DR: This paper argued that it is not objective diversity but a subjective sense of "we-ness" which is the key determinant of the level of public goods provision and social development in the Indian state of Kerala.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hegemony, popular culture and geopolitics: the Reader's Digest and the construction of danger

TL;DR: In a follow-up article as mentioned in this paper, the same authors extended the call for a critical geopolitics with the use of an empirical example of the Reader's Digest and its changing perception of the Soviet Union and communism between 1930 and 1945.
Journal ArticleDOI

From Colonial Pluralism to Postcolonial Multiculturalism: Race, State Formation and the Question of Cultural Diversity in Malaysia and Singapore

TL;DR: In this paper, a transition from colonial pluralism to post-colonized multiculturalism is discussed, in which nationalist leaders tapped into communitarian practices, scripted cultural identities and transformed themselves into a transcultural elite to maintain authoritarian rule through state multiracialism.