When Nationalism Began to Hate Imagining Modern Politics in Nineteenth-Century Poland

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2000-02-24
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

In When Nationalism Began to Hate, Brian Porter offers a challenging new explanation for the emergence of xenophobic, authoritarian nationalism in Europe. He begins by examining the common assumption that nationalist movements by nature draw lines of inclusion and exclusion around socialgroups, establishing authority and hierarchy among "one's own" and antagonism towards "others." Porter argues instead that the penetration of communal hatred and social discipline into the rhetoric of nationalism must be explained, not merely assumed. Porter focuses on nineteenth-century Poland, tracing the transformation of revolutionary patriotism into a violent anti-Semitic ideology. Instead of deterministically attributing this change to the "forces of modernization," Porter demonstrates that the language of hatred and discipline was centralto the way "modernity" itself was perceived by fin-de-siecle intellectuals. The book is based on a wide variety of sources, including political speeches and posters, newspaper articles and editorials, underground brochures, published and unpublished memoirs, personal letters, and nineteenth-century books on history, sociology, and politics. It embeds nationalism within amuch broader framework, showing how the concept of "the nation" played a role in liberal, conservative, socialist, and populist thought. When Nationalism Began to Hate is not only a detailed history of Polish nationalism but also an ambitious study of how the term "nation" functioned within the political imagination of "modernity." It will prove an important text for a wide range of students and researchers of European history andpolitics.

Author Biography


Brian Porter is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Michigan.

Table of Contents

Introduction 3(230)
National Democracy
9(4)
Notes on Terminology
13(2)
The Nation as Action
15(28)
The Christ of Nations
17(12)
The Revolutionary Nation
29(8)
Jewish Poles
37(6)
The Social Nation
43(15)
Positivism
44(4)
Work, Work, and Work
48(4)
Authority and the Social Organism
52(6)
The Struggle for Survival
58(17)
Working for Independence
60(5)
The Survival of the Fittest
65(10)
The Return to Action
75(29)
The Intelligentsia's World
76(5)
Russian Examples
81(3)
The Spirit of Protest against Everything Vile
84(14)
The Politics of Mickiewicz
98(6)
The Lud, The Narod, and Historical Time
104(31)
The Reactionary Nation?
106(6)
Two Civilizations
112(5)
The Common Front
117(12)
The Abandonment of Historical Time
129(6)
Organization
135(22)
Agitation and Organization
138(5)
From Democracy to Discipline
143(14)
The National Struggle
157(32)
Unleashing the Struggle for Survival
160(11)
Resisting the Struggle for Survival
171(5)
Nationalism Begins to Hate
176(6)
Polish Imperialism
182(7)
National Egoism
189(44)
Grounding the Modern Self
193(7)
Beyond Ethnicity: Defining the Modern Nation
200(7)
The Ethics of the Struggle for Survival
207(12)
National Expansion
219(8)
National Democracy and the Jews
227(6)
Conclusion 233(6)
Notes 239(44)
Selected Bibliography 283(20)
Index 303

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