Nationalist: Difference between revisions
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'''Nationalism''' is often interpreted as being similar in meaning to love of | '''Nationalism''' is often interpreted as being similar in meaning to love of country. However, a nation can extend beyond the borders of a country. Nationalism in modern parlance is no e-the-less usually interpreted as being support for a particular country, without this having deeper ethnic, racial, religious, or other cultural foundations. | ||
Such forms of argued nationalism can then include support for multiracial/multicultural countries, which consist of many different groups with few shared interests and identities, except possibly an arguably superficial, arguably artificially created civic " | Such forms of argued nationalism can then include support for multiracial/multicultural countries, which consist of many different groups with few shared interests and identities, except possibly an arguably superficial, arguably artificially created civic "fascist" identity. See also [[CivNat]]. | ||
In a nearly opposite view, nation states and nationalism are often seen as 19th-century European creations, associated with developments such as obligatory state-mandated education, mass literacy, and mass media, supposedly creating in the general population socially constructed senses of national identity and nationalism. | In a nearly opposite view, nation states and nationalism are often seen as 19th-century European creations, associated with developments such as obligatory state-mandated education, mass literacy, and mass media, supposedly creating in the general population socially constructed senses of national identity and nationalism. | ||
Latest revision as of 12:05, 15 February 2024
Nationalism is often interpreted as being similar in meaning to love of country. However, a nation can extend beyond the borders of a country. Nationalism in modern parlance is no e-the-less usually interpreted as being support for a particular country, without this having deeper ethnic, racial, religious, or other cultural foundations. Such forms of argued nationalism can then include support for multiracial/multicultural countries, which consist of many different groups with few shared interests and identities, except possibly an arguably superficial, arguably artificially created civic "fascist" identity. See also CivNat.
In a nearly opposite view, nation states and nationalism are often seen as 19th-century European creations, associated with developments such as obligatory state-mandated education, mass literacy, and mass media, supposedly creating in the general population socially constructed senses of national identity and nationalism.