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The poetics of liminal places : landscape and the construction of white identity in early 20th century South AfricaFoster, Jeremy Adrian January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Gender and nationalism in the Hellenic world 1836-1897TzanakeÌ?, DeÌ?meÌ?tra January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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The Disintegration of the Soviet Union: A Study of the Variable of NationalismYu, Hui-Ching 03 July 2002 (has links)
This dissertation deals with the evolution of national identification and the rise of nationalism in the Soviet Union. The result was the disintegration of the Soviet Union and the establishment of 15 new successor states in 1991.
This dissertation begins with some reflections on the theories of nationalism and Sovietology, and an account of the national components of the Russian Empire before October Revolution in 1917. The collapse of the Russian Empire and its eventual restoration under Bolshevik¡¦s rule in the form of the Soviet Union are examined. Having recaptured most of the territory of the Empire they inherited, the Communist rulers were forced to face the complicated task of ethnic issues. I examine the interactionary between Marxist¡¦s theories on the management of ethnic and national problems and the reality the rulers had to face.
It was the decentralizing economic reform of 1957, which adopted the territorial principle and led to pro-nationalist localism. In the absence of market, this affected the system¡¦s cohesion and the maintenance of central power. In Brezhnev¡¦s era, a compromise was made with indigenous elites. They were able to consolidate their control and put down roots in the process of modernization. Thus, corruption, the ¡¥shadow economy¡¦, and ¡¥national interests¡¦ arose as indigenous elites modifying the impact of the recentralized system. Gorbachev¡¦s reforms included three things: Marketization led to the collapse of the command economy; glasnost eliminated the privileged position of Marxism-Leninism within a few years and the rewriting of Soviet history destroyed the legitimacy of Stalin and the institution he built; democratization undermined all forms of authority, especially that of the political center. Gorbachev¡¦s reforms caused grievance and resentments break out. Many decades of communist rule had destroyed civil society in the multinational state implied that the cooperation was most likely to be achieved by means of nation solidarity. Nationalist identity then became the principal vehicle of political mobilization.
In conclusion, this author proposes a developmental model of nationalism in Soviet years. The role of nationalism was a precondition for the disintegration of the Soviet Union, which changed the direction of political agenda. The rise of Soviet nationalism could be characterized as a top-down case. They were constantly being shaped and constructed by the state-initiated transformation. This dissertation has demonstrated that nation identifications were deeply embedded in those nations¡¦ understanding of their past, and their growth by and large were the results of Moscow¡¦s policies.
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The musical Sherlock Holmes : Frank Kidson and the English folk music revival, c.1890-1926Francmanis, John Valdis January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Immigration, assimilation and nation-building in Venezuela : the Perez Jimenez government and its aftermathDerham, Michael Joseph January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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A post-conquest English retrospect upon the age of the Anglo-Saxons : a study of the early-middle-English verse chronicle attributed to Robert of GloucesterMitchell, Sarah L. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Multiculturalism in the UAE perceptions of national identity and diversity /Al-Shamsi, Samia Abdulla Al Sheikh Mubarak. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Aberdeen University, 2009. / Title from web page (viewed on Apr. 21, 2009). Includes bibliographical references.
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Multiculturalism revisited : towards a shared national membership in a multicultural, democratic nation-stateDix, Eeke January 2015 (has links)
This thesis investigates the negotiated interpretations of “self” amongst 2nd generation Dutch-Moroccan and Dutch-Turkish individuals. It thus enhances our understanding of a national identity that is both cohesive as well as susceptible to the multicultural dimensions the modern nation-state inhabits. As part of a theoretical evaluation of multiculturalism, the focus is on the relationship between nationalism and multiculturalism, and between acknowledging the civic and ethnic dimensions that embody and unite the national “self”. The thesis unpicks how and in which ways these elements influence the accommodation, the respect and inclusion of the ethno-culturally diverse “other”. Multiculturalism theory tends to overlook this important symbiosis which might explain the current, widespread public and political stance that no longer regards multiculturalism as a viable, sustainable approach to diversity. The Netherlands is an interesting case study not least because it was portrayed as the multicultural example and yet illuminates a gradual, yet devastating and definite abandonment of multiculturalism. This was symbolized by the assassination of film maker and Islam critic Theo van Gogh whose murderer, a young, educated, Dutch-Moroccan man, claimed to have killed in the name of Islam. The main analysis involves data from thirteen interviewees conducted with seven Dutch- Moroccans and six Dutch-Turks. Such 2nd generation migrants have seen their “Dutchness” contested and/or questioned despite the fact that their upbringing, education and daily life has largely occurred in the Netherlands. Other forms of data collection include a small scale online survey, a pilot participant observation session, and conducted interviews with experts of relevant organisations. This hybrid mélange of data illuminates methodological issues of researching a target group that is highly “researched”. The thesis commences with a contextual chapter that illuminates changing (inter)national public and political discourse on integration and offers a critical overview of Dutch immigration and integration policies (chapter 4). The Dutch approach of “pillarized multiculturalism” illuminates a key flaw in the practical implementation of multiculturalism where the focus on bonding rather than bridging accentuated a rigidified, “pillarized” segmentation of cultural difference according to social categories rather than individual integrity. As a consequence of these policies, an embedded notion of categorical “differentness” is sustained, and is reflected in Dutch-Moroccan and Dutch-Turkish individuals’ identification processes of “self”. In this regard, the role of culture is highlighted in two distinct ways that acts a) as a tool that serves Dutch-Moroccans and Dutch-Turks to negotiate an individualistic, civic, inclusive “Dutchness” as part of their religious and ethno-cultural affiliations and b) as an essentialist force that embodies a “culturalist” Dutch identity that is ethno-ancestrally exclusive (Chapter 5, 6 and 7). The thesis thus demonstrates the civic-ethnic dialectic inherent in national identity. This dialectic, comprising dilemmas of exclusion and inclusion and boundaries between majority and minority cultures, can shape a better understanding of a national membership that induces both national cohesion as well as accommodates multicultural diversity.
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Finding England everywhere : representations of the Cotswolds, 1880-1950Brace, Catherine Sylvia January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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“Here’s Tae Us! Wha’s Like Us?” Jacobitism and the Creation of a Scottish National IdentityRobinson, Nicole A. January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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