
Small Countries
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In terms of population size, some two thirds of the countries of the world can now be considered small countries, and they can be found in all world regions except North America and East Asia. They exhibit great diversity with regard to culture, history, and institutional arrangements, so there can be no model of any "typical" small country. Yet the essays collected by Ulf Hannerz and Andre Gingrich identify a range of family resemblances in such areas as internal connectivity and sensibilities of identity. Contributors describe a number of similar problems with which small countries must cope, on domestic levels as well as in their transnational and global encounters. For some small countries, challenges such as media organization and branding have a negative impact on real or perceived vulnerability, while for others, the same challenges facilitate success stories.
Comparative case studies cover a diverse set of regions, including the Caribbean, Middle East, Africa, and Europe, and employ diverse anthropological approaches. Tacit assumptions about scale, identities, and networks in everyday social life are best revealed through close, interpretive effort. At times a sense of shared belonging comes to the fore with particular events, such as a national crisis or an unexpected success in international sports, offering scope for situational analyses. In showing how small countries confront globalization, Small Countries reveals how the sense of scale intensifies when the world as a whole shrinks.
Contributors: Regina F. Bendix, Aleksandar BoSkovic, Virginia R. Dominguez, Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Andre Gingrich, Beng-Lan Goh, Ulf Hannerz, Sulayman N. Khalaf, Eva-Maria Knoll, Jacqueline KnOErr, Orvar LOEfgren, JoAo de Pina-Cabral, Don Robotham, Cris Shore, Richard Wilk, Helena Wulff.
Reviews / Votes
"Small Countries is a remarkably fresh and engaging contribution to the anthropology of the nation-state. While such macroanthropology has often been understood to stand in tension with more traditionally localized sorts of ethnographic practice, the authors use the very smallness of the 'small country' to show how ideas and practices of national cultural intimacy disrupt received ideas of scale that still haunt our understandings of what is, and is not, anthropological. Through a fascinating set of cases presented by an impressive set of contributors, this stimulating book arrives at a distinctive and original perspective on the nation-state." (James Ferguson, Stanford University) "Small Countries is unique: its chapters cover a range of societies that do not get much analyzed anthropologically, a potpourri of far-flung places from New Zealand to Sierra Leone to Norway to Palestine united by the common trope of smallness. It is also remarkable because of the down-to-earth quality of its prose: its chapters are a delight to read. Not just anthropologists, but anyone who reads the Economist or Foreign Affairs, or for that matter a daily newspaper, can enjoy and learn from this collection of essays." (Gordon Mathews, Chinese University of Hong Kong)More details
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Content
- Cover
- Contents
- Introduction: Exploring Small Countries
- PART I. NATIONHOODS: MIRRORS AND MAGNIFYING GLASSES
- Chapter 1. "100% Pure New Zealand": National Branding and the Paradoxes of Scale
- Chapter 2. After 22 July 2011: Norwegians Together
- Chapter 3. The Scandinavian Cluster: Small Countries with Big Egos
- PART II. ASPIRING FOR SUCCESS
- Chapter 4. Red Dot on the Map: Singapore, Size, and the Problems of Success
- Chapter 5. "Wi Likkle but Wi Tallawah": Soft Power and Smallness in Jamaica
- Chapter 6. On Chutzpah Countries and "Shitty Little Countries"
- PART III. BEING AND BECOMING SMALL
- Chapter 7. Portugal and the Dynamics of Smallness
- Chapter 8. Two Countries in the Alps: Austrian and Swiss Presentations of Self for Internal and Global Consumption
- Chapter 9. Serbia and the Surplus of History: Being Small, Large, and Small Again
- PART IV. STRUGGLING WITH SCALES
- Chapter 10. Blood and Other Precious Resources: Vulnerability and Social Cohesion on the Maldives
- Chapter 11. Belize: A Country but Not a Nation
- Chapter 12. A War and After: Sierra Leone Reconnects, Within Itself and with the World
- PART V. GRANDEUR, IRONY, AND SMALL WORLDS
- Chapter 13. An Emirate Goes Global: The Cultural Making of Abu Dhabi
- Chapter 14. Smiles and Smallness: Jokes in Yemen and Palestine
- Chapter 15. Greater Than Its Size: Ireland in Literature and Life
- Chapter 16. Swedish Encounters: End Notes of a Native Son
- List of Contributors
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Y
- Z
- Acknowledgments
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