Imagined communities against the tide? The questioned political projection of nationalism

This article deals with the validity of Anderson’s definition of imagined communities and the future of imagination typical of nationalism. It is based on bibliographic review and research on the case of Cerdanya. Three questions of Anderson’s definition are revised: the limitation of the nation, it...

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Main Author: Albert Moncusí
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Diputació de València 2017-02-01
Series:Debats. Revista de cultura, poder i societat
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.28939/iam.debats-en.2016-2
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spelling doaj-b38e888ff9d340a4b66c75dcd9f977fb2020-11-24T23:21:12ZcatDiputació de ValènciaDebats. Revista de cultura, poder i societat0212-05852530-30742017-02-011010.28939/iam.debats-en.2016-274Imagined communities against the tide? The questioned political projection of nationalismAlbert Moncusí0Universitat de ValènciaThis article deals with the validity of Anderson’s definition of imagined communities and the future of imagination typical of nationalism. It is based on bibliographic review and research on the case of Cerdanya. Three questions of Anderson’s definition are revised: the limitation of the nation, its supposedly inherent sovereignty and the sense of community among unknown people. In this last point, the text focuses also on the consequences that imagined community is embodied for known people every day. It concludes that the production of local identities and dynamics in global, local and regional level represents a challenge for the political projection of imagined communities. Nevertheless, that production is not absolutely questioned. Denationalisation dynamics are produced in sovereignty and delimitation becomes more porous but it carries on the cultural production of community limits by education, army and communications. In addition, some global alternatives to national communities arise, but the nationalist grammar remains intact as a base of community categories and identifications.http://dx.doi.org/10.28939/iam.debats-en.2016-2Nation-state, culture, power, territory, globalisation, ethnicity
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Albert Moncusí
spellingShingle Albert Moncusí
Imagined communities against the tide? The questioned political projection of nationalism
Debats. Revista de cultura, poder i societat
Nation-state, culture, power, territory, globalisation, ethnicity
author_facet Albert Moncusí
author_sort Albert Moncusí
title Imagined communities against the tide? The questioned political projection of nationalism
title_short Imagined communities against the tide? The questioned political projection of nationalism
title_full Imagined communities against the tide? The questioned political projection of nationalism
title_fullStr Imagined communities against the tide? The questioned political projection of nationalism
title_full_unstemmed Imagined communities against the tide? The questioned political projection of nationalism
title_sort imagined communities against the tide? the questioned political projection of nationalism
publisher Diputació de València
series Debats. Revista de cultura, poder i societat
issn 0212-0585
2530-3074
publishDate 2017-02-01
description This article deals with the validity of Anderson’s definition of imagined communities and the future of imagination typical of nationalism. It is based on bibliographic review and research on the case of Cerdanya. Three questions of Anderson’s definition are revised: the limitation of the nation, its supposedly inherent sovereignty and the sense of community among unknown people. In this last point, the text focuses also on the consequences that imagined community is embodied for known people every day. It concludes that the production of local identities and dynamics in global, local and regional level represents a challenge for the political projection of imagined communities. Nevertheless, that production is not absolutely questioned. Denationalisation dynamics are produced in sovereignty and delimitation becomes more porous but it carries on the cultural production of community limits by education, army and communications. In addition, some global alternatives to national communities arise, but the nationalist grammar remains intact as a base of community categories and identifications.
topic Nation-state, culture, power, territory, globalisation, ethnicity
url http://dx.doi.org/10.28939/iam.debats-en.2016-2
work_keys_str_mv AT albertmoncusi imaginedcommunitiesagainstthetidethequestionedpoliticalprojectionofnationalism
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