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Nationalism and ethnicity as identity politics in Eastern Europe and the Basque CountryYoung, Jason Richard 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis demonstrates the powerful relationship between ethnicity, culture, nation and state in the Basque Country and the Former Yugoslavia. In placing Basque and Yugoslav sub-state nationalism in comparative relief this study argues that political state or autonomy seeking behavior on the basis of an ethnically defined or imagined community continues to have powerful contemporary salience. Furthermore when situated within the literature on nationalism, these two cases suggest that the theoretical literature needs to be reworked beyond the positions of Anthony Smith and Ernest Gellner. The endurance of cultural claims to a political state suggests that the connection between ethnicity and the nation is stronger then many contemporary observers have suggested. It is argued that the cultural, political and territorial rights of sub-state nations are likely to remain highly divisive sites of historical, cultural and political contestation. As a force, nationalism is by no means relegated to the past by cosmopolitanism or a ‘post-national’ shift as a number of high profile commentators in the contemporary social sciences have argued.
Rather, it remains an active and powerful idea that will continue to shape the sociopolitical landscape of human societies into the twenty-first century as it has the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Nationalismus und ethnische Identität im 'spanischen' Baskenland /Römhildt, Kerstin. January 1994 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Magisterarbeit--Institut für Ethnologie--Universität Hamburg, 1992. / Notes bibliogr. Bibliogr. p. 139-148.
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Los paraísos posibles : historia de la emigración vasca a Argentina y Uruguay en el siglo XIX /Azcona Pastor, José Manuel, January 1992 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Tesis doct.--Bilbao--Universidad de Deusto.
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Lexico etnografico vasco /Garmendia Larrañaga, Juan. January 1987 (has links)
Tesis--Facultad de filosofía y ciencias de la educación--San Sebastian--Universidad del pais vasco, 1984. / Mention parallèle de titre ou de responsabilité : Euskal lexiko etnografikoa / Juan Garmendia Larrañaga ; zuzenduriko doktorego-tesia Julio Caro Baroja ; aurkeztaileak Xabier Otaño Etxaniz, Xabier Alkorta Andonegi ; sarreba-testuen egileak Koldo Mitxelena Elissalt, Julio Caro Baroja, Jose Miguel de Barandiaran. Lexique basque-espagnol. Introd. en basque et en espagnol.
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Quel territoire pour le Pays Basque ? : les cartes de l'identité /Chaussier, Jean-Daniel. January 1996 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Th. doct.--Sci. polit.--Bordeaux--Institut d'études politiques, 1989. / Bibliogr. p. 281-291.
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Nationalism and ethnicity as identity politics in Eastern Europe and the Basque CountryYoung, Jason Richard 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis demonstrates the powerful relationship between ethnicity, culture, nation and state in the Basque Country and the Former Yugoslavia. In placing Basque and Yugoslav sub-state nationalism in comparative relief this study argues that political state or autonomy seeking behavior on the basis of an ethnically defined or imagined community continues to have powerful contemporary salience. Furthermore when situated within the literature on nationalism, these two cases suggest that the theoretical literature needs to be reworked beyond the positions of Anthony Smith and Ernest Gellner. The endurance of cultural claims to a political state suggests that the connection between ethnicity and the nation is stronger then many contemporary observers have suggested. It is argued that the cultural, political and territorial rights of sub-state nations are likely to remain highly divisive sites of historical, cultural and political contestation. As a force, nationalism is by no means relegated to the past by cosmopolitanism or a ‘post-national’ shift as a number of high profile commentators in the contemporary social sciences have argued.
Rather, it remains an active and powerful idea that will continue to shape the sociopolitical landscape of human societies into the twenty-first century as it has the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. / Arts, Faculty of / Central Eastern Northern European Studies, Department of / Graduate
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A Study of the Political and Social Ideas of Pio Baroja as Manifested in his WritingsRainey, Rosalva Alverez 01 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation is to study the writings of Baroja to ascertain what his social and political ideas were, and to determine if these ideas changed, as evidenced in a comparison of his earlier and later writings.
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Amerikanuak eta Asmoak: New World Basques and Immigration TheoriesEcheverría, Jerónima, 1946- 08 1900 (has links)
The focus of this thesis is the relationship between immigration historiography and the history of Basque migration to the United States. The depictions of immigration presented by historians Oscar Handlin, Marcus Lee Hansen, and John Higham have been influential in immigration historiography and are presented in the first chapter. The second chapter contains a description of Old World Basque culture and the third chapter presents a brief history of Basque migration to the United States. The fourth chapter discusses to what extent the immigration theories presented in chapter one match the Basque experience in the New World. The concluding chapter contains some observations on the nature of immigration historiography, on the Basques, and on new directions for research.
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Sprachkontakt und Sprachwandel im Baskenland : die Einflüsse des Gaskognischen und Französischen auf das Baskische /Haase, Martin, January 1900 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Philosophische Fakultät--Köln--Universität, 1991.
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Ciudadanos del Atlántico : las redes de aprovisionamiento trasatlánticas de las pescas vascas en Canadá a través de su cerámica, siglos XVI-XVIIIBarreiro Argüelles, Saraí 12 1900 (has links)
Depuis les années 1980, les archéologues ont remarqué l'originalité des collections de céramiques trouvées sur des sites occupés par les pêcheurs basques au cours du XVIe au
XVIIIe siècle sur les côtes atlantiques du Canada. Le site de Red Bay (Labrador) a été le
premier à fournir une riche collection de terre cuites communes, majoliques et grès, qui ont
permis aux archéologues de reconnaître une tradition céramique distincte. Pendant plus de
deux siècles, ces céramiques constituent un fil conducteur qui montre la permanence des
activités commerciales basques au Canada.
En utilisant une approche mutualiste et comparative de quatre sites de pêche basque (Red
Bay (1530-1580), Anse-à-la-Cave (1580-1630), Petit-Mécatina (1630-1713), Pabos (1713-
1760)) et leurs ports d’attache dans l’Europe atlantique, nous observons comment à partir
du milieu du XVIe siècle, l’ensemble des céramiques se transforme d'un endroit à l’autre
sans perdre son air distinctif jusqu'au début du XVIIIe siècle quand les témoins des
céramiques basques changent radicalement. Finalement, une perspective globale qui relie
les deux côtes atlantiques par le biais de ces matériaux céramiques nous aide à mieux
connaître les réseaux d'approvisionnement liés aux traversées de pêche et l’espace
économique complexe qui s’articule aux routes maritimes et de l’intérieur. Ces deux
éléments se veulent essentiels à la compréhension de l'expansion outremers, ses materiaux
laissés et son rôle dans l'économie mondiale au début de l'époque moderne. / Since the 1980s, archaeologists have remarked the originality of the ceramic
collections found on sites occupied by Basque fishermen during the sixteenth to the
eighteenth centuries on the Atlantic coasts of Canada. The site of Red Bay (Labrador) was
the first to provide a rich collection of common coarse earthenware, stoneware and
majolica that allowed archaeologists to recognise a distinctive pottery tradition. For over
two centuries, these ceramics form a continuous thread of materials showing the
permanence of Basque commercial activities in Canada. Using a mutualistic and
comparative approach to four Basque fishing sites – Red Bay (1530-1580), Anse-à-la-Cave
(1580-1630), Petit-Mécatina (1630-1713), Pabos (1713-1760) – and their outfitting ports in
Atlantic Europe, we will observe how this mid-sixteenth century ceramic collection was
transformed from one place to another without losing its distinctive nature until the early
eighteenth century, when the Basque ceramic record changes radically. Finally, through a
global perspective that links the two Atlantic shores by way of these ceramic materials, we
discover the supply networks for the Basque fishery, and the complex economic space that
articulated its maritime and continental routes, two elements that are key to understanding
the European overseas expansion and its configuration within the world economy of the
early modern era.
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