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Set compiles histories of most important Basque clubs around the world, based on first hand memories of emigrants.
Set compiles histories of most important Basque clubs around the world, based on first hand memories of emigrants.
Set compiles histories of most important Basque clubs around the world, based on first hand memories of emigrants.
Esta obra reflexiona sobre la formación de las colectividades vascas en el exterior desde el s. XVI hasta los albores del s. XXI. Los vascos, como otros pueblos emigrantes del pasado y presente, presentaron una gran tendencia a mostrarse ante las sociedades que los acogieron de un modo colectivo, adoptando una identidad peculiar que permeaba a todos los procedentes de un mismo origen geográfico y cultural. Estas identidades colectivas descansaban en dos pilares: una organización interna nucleada en torno a la aparición de instituciones que, si bien nunca acogieron a la totalidad de los inmigrantes en un espacio determinado, sí que usufructuaron la interlocución entre sociedad de acogida y grupo inmigrante.
Originally published in 1985, New Nationalisms in the Developed West is a collection of interdisciplinary and insightful essays on modern nationalist movements. The book argues that these movements have challenged the power of Western nation-states not from without, but from within their frontiers. The book’s focus remains predominately on Western societies and the nationalist movements of nations against states. The essays in this book are detailed and innovative and analyse nationalism through theory, methodology and empirical evidence. The book’s use of research methods deepens the comparative explanation of nationalist movements, and advances understanding of Western nationalisms as social movements and examples of social change in the developed world. This book will appeal to social scientists, in political science and sociology.
This book is a revised translation of two works by Miroslav Hroch, which together form a pioneering comparative analysis of the various struggles for national identity in nineteenth-century Europe. It is concerned with the decisive phase of 'national renaissance', when small groups of committed patriots successfully generated mass support. When and why was their propaganda effective? The author attempts to answer this fundamental question by locating the patriots within the contemporary social structure, and uses data derived from many different nationalisms. The work is divided into three sections; a theoretical examination of the origins of nationalism and nation-hood, a quantitative survey of the social and territorial structure of the patriots of eight representative national movements, and a comparative analysis of the social and professional groups that formed the milieu of patriotism. Numerous statistical tables and maps illuminate the text, which forms one of the most significant studies of the nationalist phenomenon to be published in recent years.