National Identities in France explores nationalism, national
identities, and the various ways in which these concepts are
accepted, adapted, discarded, or internally disputed across
ideological divides. The popular assumption that automatically
regards nationalism as a largely right-wing concern, occludes the
many ways in which nationalism and national identities have
contributed to social imagination and political or literary
discourses across the right-left spectrum.
The critical grounds on which such reflections are undertaken
are rich and varied. The idea of invented traditions has long
suggested how such a thing as the modernnation-state could vest
itself in the creatively assembled robes of a dim and distant past.
In plotting the ground on which nationalisms are located, previous
studies have shown, among other things, the uses and limitations of
the distinction of ethnic and civic nationalism. Studies on
national development reveal the imitative process that brought
about nation building in former colonies of the Western powers.
Each chapter asks important questions concerning nationalism and
national identities in relation to France. With nationalism,
apparently stable distinctions collapse under the pressure of
French national identity. The signs are that French national
identities and nationalisms are in a constant state of reinvention
and negotiation, of periodic crisis and constant rebirth. If
political classes attempt to manipulate national identity for some
larger project, they have no monopoly on the social imaginary.
National mobilization is a multiple and polysemic process, not a
univocal and rigid ideology.
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