| Rogers Brubaker - Political Science - 1996 - 220 pages
...been inclined to theorize them.15 I know of no sustained analytical discussions of nationness as an event, as something that suddenly crystallizes rather...for individual and collective action, rather than as a relatively stable product of deep developmental trends in economy, polity, or culture. Yet a strong... | |
| Psychology - 420 pages
...institutionalized form, not as collectivity but as practical category, not as entity but as contingent event ... as something that suddenly crystallizes...for individual and collective action, rather than as a relatively stable product of deep developmental trends in economy, polity, or culture."16 As Brubaker... | |
| Steven Seidman, Jeffrey C. Alexander - Political Science - 2001 - 428 pages
...been inclined to theorize them.1i I know of no sustained analvtical discussions of nationness as an event, as something that suddenly crystallizes rather...fluctuating, and precarious frame of vision and basis tor individual and collective action, rather than as a relatively stable product of deep developmental... | |
| Myron Weiner, Sharon Stanton Russell - Political Science - 2001 - 372 pages
...networks to join, social networks are less a cause of ethnic identification than a reflection of it. contingent, conjuncturally fluctuating, and precarious...vision and basis for individual and collective action." His suggestion is both troubling and suggestive, troubling because the focus on nationalism's dynamics... | |
| Mark R. Beissinger - History - 2002 - 524 pages
...nationalism, Brubaker observes, is a perspective which allows the possibility of thinking of nationhood "as something that suddenly crystallizes rather than...conjuncturally fluctuating, and precarious frame of vision. "21 This is not to say that the events associated with nationalism have not been studied. On the contrary,... | |
| Eric Lohr - History - 2003 - 270 pages
...the "sudden and pervasive nationalization of public and even private life," and nationality itself "as something that suddenly crystallizes rather than...basis for individual and collective action rather than as a relatively stable product of deep developmental trends in economy, polity or culture."27 Hence... | |
| Geneviève Zubrzycki - Social Science - 2009 - 303 pages
...nation's mutability and processual quality. He incites us to think of nationness itself as a contingent "event," as something that "suddenly crystallizes...for individual and collective action, rather than as a relatively stable product of deep developmental trends in economy, polity, or culture" (1996,... | |
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