
Kin, People or Nation?
On European Political Identities
Victor Neumann(Author)
Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers Ltd
Published on 8. November 2021
Book
Paperback/Softback
184 pages
978-1-78551-374-9 (ISBN)
Description
"Starting from the history of concepts, Victor Neumann shows how the variety of connotations associated with the ideas of 'nation' and 'people' have been circumscribed in south-eastern Europe, holding back the region over many decades. More important, with erudition and seriousness of purpose, he mounts a defence of a notion of identity that is neither fixed nor monocultural, and proposes a legal definition of 'nation' that can resist exclusivist or racist versions. In an age when counter-rational fantasies about identity seem to be prevailing, when many seem unaware of or have forgotten where such thinking leads, Neumann's is a much-needed voice of reason." - Dan Stone, Professor of Modern History, Royal Holloway, University of London
With a focus on the origins and evolution of political identity, this book explores the way different linguistic communities have defined kin, ethnicity, citizenship and the nation. As Neumann traces the transition over the last two centuries of European history, from the medieval to the modern age, he pays particular attention to the idealistic philosophies that have influenced the intellectual landscape and political discourse of European regions today, and which have intensified the division between East and West in terms of cultural norms, legislation and administration.
With a focus on the origins and evolution of political identity, this book explores the way different linguistic communities have defined kin, ethnicity, citizenship and the nation. As Neumann traces the transition over the last two centuries of European history, from the medieval to the modern age, he pays particular attention to the idealistic philosophies that have influenced the intellectual landscape and political discourse of European regions today, and which have intensified the division between East and West in terms of cultural norms, legislation and administration.
Reviews / Votes
"In a study concerning trans-culturalism, Harvey Siegel reveals the reasons that drove the partisans of multi-cultural theory to adopt a sole manner of legitimacy, according to which the philosophical ideals and education would be necessarily specific." - Levant Institute for Advanced Studies "This book should prove very useful to a wide readership - to all those concerned with the relationship between individual and group identity, and the crises and conflicts it can trigger... The book could also serve as a guide for politicians (who still largely cling to rhetorical stereotypes and childish speculations), helping them towards a better understanding of the substance and terminology of identity politics, and constructive solutions to communication between different cultural and identity groups." - Professor Florin Lobont, Banatul azi (Original text in Romanian) "Through his stunning photography, beautifully reproduced in this book, Konigshofer captures the breathtaking surroundings he encounters, from snowy mountain vistas and dramatic coastlines to icy fjords and remote villages." - Outdoor PhotographyMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
Weight
365 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78551-374-9 (9781785513749)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Victor Neumann is a Romanian historian, political analyst, Professor of Romanian and European Intellectual History at the Bucharest National University of Arts and Senior Researcher at the Romanian Academy of Sciences. He is a well-known specialist in the recent cultural and intellectual histories of Eastern and Central Europe.
Content
Illustrations
Foreword
Preface
Chapter I - JULES MICHELET'S CONCEPT OF PEUPLE
1. Commentary on its origins and meanings
2. Michelet's interrogations
3. Challenging Thierry's arguments
4. When le peuple becomes la nation
5. The social myth
6. Le peuple and geographical determinism
7. The distinguishing features of Michelet's concept of peuple
Chapter II - VOLK (PEOPLE) AND SPRACHE (LANGUAGE):
HERDER'S THEORIES OF ETHNICITY AND THE NATION
1. For a new comprehension of Herderian ideology
2. The 'genius' of Sturm und Drang
3. 'Songs are the people's archive' - Prussia's German aspirations, embodied by Kulturnation
4. The spirit of the people, viewed from a scientific perspective
5. The purity of Volk and the organic nation
Chapter III - THE NATION: THE MEANINGS OF A HISTORICAL-POLITICAL CONCEPT
1. What is a Nation?
2. The concept of nation in contemporary Europe
3. Why does the concept of nation need to be redefined in relation to Central and South eastern Europe?
Chapter IV - KIN AND PEOPLE: THE CHARACTERISTICS OF ROMANIAN ETHNOCENTRISM
1. Geographical variations of European culture and politics
2. Symbolic figures and Romanian conceptual confusions
3. The racial connotations of kin
Chapter V - THEORETICAL ANALYSIS OF THE ROMANIAN CONCEPT OF NATION
1. Hostility towards diversity or the fantasy of the organic nation
2. Refusal of discontinuity, or the confusion between the old patriarchal society and the modern nation: a neo-Romantic perspective on the beginnings of the Romanian nation
3. The return to Herder
4. The uniqueness of ethnic culture or a further discussion of the idea of nation
Chapter VI - MULTICULTURAL PHILOSOPHY: A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
1. The education and philosophy of multicultural differentialism: observations on Charles Taylor's perspective
2. Ideological meanings of multiculturalism: observations on Habermas's objection to Taylor
3. Harvey Siegel's contribution: transculturality
4. Conditions leading to false premises of multiculturalism
5. The concept of multiple identity
Conclusions
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Foreword
Preface
Chapter I - JULES MICHELET'S CONCEPT OF PEUPLE
1. Commentary on its origins and meanings
2. Michelet's interrogations
3. Challenging Thierry's arguments
4. When le peuple becomes la nation
5. The social myth
6. Le peuple and geographical determinism
7. The distinguishing features of Michelet's concept of peuple
Chapter II - VOLK (PEOPLE) AND SPRACHE (LANGUAGE):
HERDER'S THEORIES OF ETHNICITY AND THE NATION
1. For a new comprehension of Herderian ideology
2. The 'genius' of Sturm und Drang
3. 'Songs are the people's archive' - Prussia's German aspirations, embodied by Kulturnation
4. The spirit of the people, viewed from a scientific perspective
5. The purity of Volk and the organic nation
Chapter III - THE NATION: THE MEANINGS OF A HISTORICAL-POLITICAL CONCEPT
1. What is a Nation?
2. The concept of nation in contemporary Europe
3. Why does the concept of nation need to be redefined in relation to Central and South eastern Europe?
Chapter IV - KIN AND PEOPLE: THE CHARACTERISTICS OF ROMANIAN ETHNOCENTRISM
1. Geographical variations of European culture and politics
2. Symbolic figures and Romanian conceptual confusions
3. The racial connotations of kin
Chapter V - THEORETICAL ANALYSIS OF THE ROMANIAN CONCEPT OF NATION
1. Hostility towards diversity or the fantasy of the organic nation
2. Refusal of discontinuity, or the confusion between the old patriarchal society and the modern nation: a neo-Romantic perspective on the beginnings of the Romanian nation
3. The return to Herder
4. The uniqueness of ethnic culture or a further discussion of the idea of nation
Chapter VI - MULTICULTURAL PHILOSOPHY: A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
1. The education and philosophy of multicultural differentialism: observations on Charles Taylor's perspective
2. Ideological meanings of multiculturalism: observations on Habermas's objection to Taylor
3. Harvey Siegel's contribution: transculturality
4. Conditions leading to false premises of multiculturalism
5. The concept of multiple identity
Conclusions
Notes
Bibliography
Index