Image for Liberalism and cultural nationalism

Liberalism and cultural nationalism

See all formats and editions

This book discusses the justifications and limits of cultural nationalism from a liberal perspective.

Chaim Gans presents a normative typology of nationalist ideologies, distinguishing between cultural liberal nationalism and statist liberal nationalism.

Statist nationalisms argue that states have an interest in the cultural homogeneity of their citizenries.

Cultural nationalisms argue that people have interests in adhering to their cultures (the adherence thesis) and in sustaining these cultures for generations (the historic thesis).

Gans argues that freedom- and identity-based justifications for cultural nationalism common in literature can only support the adherence thesis, while the historical thesis could only be justified by the interest people have in the long-term endurance of their personal and group endeavors.

The Limits of Nationalism examines demands often made in the name of cultural nationalism, such as claims for national self-determination, historical rights claims to territories and demands entailed by cultural particularism as opposed to cultural cosmopolitanism.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£110.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107131685 / 9781107131682
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
320.54
13/02/2003
English
181 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%