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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.

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No Longer in a Future Heaven: Women and Nationalism in South Africa

TL;DR: In this paper, Anderson argues that nations are best understood as "imagined communities," systems of representations whereby people come to imagine a shared experience of identification with an extended community, and that nationalisms are dangerous, not in the sense that they represent relations to political power and to the technologies of violence.
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Intimacy as a Concept: Explaining Social Change in the Context of Globalisation or Another Form of Ethnocentricism?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the analytical potential of intimacy in terms of its analytical potential for understanding social change without the one-nation blinkers sometimes referred to as'methodological nationalism' and without Euro-North American ethnocentrism.
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From empire to nation-state: Explaining wars in the modern world, 1816-2001

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a new data set that records the outbreak of war in fixed geographic territories from 1816 to 2001, independent of the political entity in control of a territory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Religious Movements and Politics in Sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on traditional and Christian religious movements in the last hundred years and present a review on the past, present and future direction of work on the interaction of religious movements and politics by focusing on a limited, but nevertheless still huge, topic and period.