Proposed to be offered next in 1999
Penelope Graham
8 points
* 2 hours per week
* Clayton
Objectives On completion of this subject, students should be able to recognise and analyse key concepts informing anthropological and sociological approaches to nationalism; demonstrate a grasp of the arguments in the principle works on nationalism currently defining the topic in the social sciences; evaluate the arguments of particular authors on the subject; critically assess the debates around prominent theories of nationalism; analyse the relationship of nationalism to various wide-ranging sociological phenomena such as colonialism and globalisation.
Synopsis This subject examines the modern phenomenon of nationalism and reviews a range of theories that attempt to account for it. Despite predictions of its demise, nationalism is apparently flourishing as we continue to witness the forging of nations and the construction of national identities around the globe. Overall, the subject explores the thesis that the nation, as a culturally defined community, is the highest symbolic value of modernity. Themes include the relationship of nationalism to ethnicity and migration, gender and sexuality, colonialism and globalisation.
Assessment Seminar participation: 20%
* Essay (2500
words): 35%
* Essay (3500 words): 45%
Recommended texts
Anderson B Imagined communities Verso, 1991
Chatterjee P The nation and its fragments Princeton U P, 1993
Comaroff J L and Stern P C (eds) Perspectives on nationalism and war
Gordon and Breach, 1995
Eriksen T H Ethnicity and nationalism: Anthropological perspectives
Pluto, 1993
Featherstone M Undoing culture: Globalization, postmodernism and
identity Sage, 1995
Foster R J (ed.) Nation making: Emergent identities in postcolonial
Melanesia Michigan U P, 1995
Gellner E Nations and nationalism Blackwell, 1983
Llobera J R The god of modernity: The development of nationalism in Western
Europe Berg, 1994
Parker A and others (eds) Nationalism and sexualities Routledge, 1992
A reading package of selected journal articles and book chapters will be
available for purchase
Published by Monash University, Australia
Maintained by wwwdev@monash.edu.au
Approved by C Jordon, Faculty of Arts
Copyright © Monash University 1997 - All Rights Reserved -
Caution