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This book seeks to reassess and shed new light on pan-nationalisms
in general and on Scandinavianism/Nordism in particular, by seeing
them as possible futures and as interconnected ideas and practices
across and beyond Europe. An actor and practice oriented approach
is applied at the expense of more essentialist categorizations of
what pan-nationalism is, or is not to underline both the synchronic
and diachronic diversity of various pan-national movements. A range
of expert international scholars discuss encounters, transfers,
similarities and differences among pan-movements in Norden and
Europe based on a broad empirical material, focusing on
Scandinavianism/Nordism, pan-Slavism, pan-Turanism, pan-Germanism
and Greater Netherlandism, and the position of Britishness in Great
Britain. This book will be of key interest to scholars and students
of nationalism, European history, European studies and Scandinavian
studies, history, social science, political geography, civil
society and literary studies.
This book seeks to reassess and shed new light on pan-nationalisms
in general and on Scandinavianism/Nordism in particular, by seeing
them as possible futures and as interconnected ideas and practices
across and beyond Europe. An actor and practice oriented approach
is applied at the expense of more essentialist categorizations of
what pan-nationalism is, or is not to underline both the synchronic
and diachronic diversity of various pan-national movements. A range
of expert international scholars discuss encounters, transfers,
similarities and differences among pan-movements in Norden and
Europe based on a broad empirical material, focusing on
Scandinavianism/Nordism, pan-Slavism, pan-Turanism, pan-Germanism
and Greater Netherlandism, and the position of Britishness in Great
Britain. This book will be of key interest to scholars and students
of nationalism, European history, European studies and Scandinavian
studies, history, social science, political geography, civil
society and literary studies.
With a combined focus on social democrats in Northern and Southern
Europe, this book crucially broadens our understanding of the
transformation of European social democracy from the mid-1970s to
the early-1990s. In doing so, it revisits the transformation of
this ideological family at the end of the Cold War, and before the
launch of Third Way politics, and examines the dynamics and power
relations at play among European social democratic parties in a
context of nascent globalisation. The chronological, methodological
and geographical approaches adopted allow for a more nuanced
narrative of change for European social democracy than the hitherto
dominant centric perspective. This book will be of key interest to
scholars and students of social democracy, the European
Centre-left, political parties, ideologies and more broadly to
comparative politics and European politics and history. The
Introduction chapter of this book is available for free in PDF
format as Open Access from the individual product page at
www.routledge.com. It has been made available under a Creative
Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license
What makes a magazine in South Africa promote Scandinavian unity
among its immigrant readers and why does a Swedish king endorse
attempts to influence pan-Scandinavian opinion through a
transnational media event in Sweden, Norway and Denmark? Can
portraits of exotic Lapplanders in the British press, enthusiastic
accounts of the welfare state in post-war travel literature and
descriptions of the liberal Nordic woman as a metaphor for a freer
society in Franco Spain really be bundled together under a joint
label of 'Nordicness'? How is it that despite the variety of images
of the Nordic region that are circulating, we still find this
recurring idea of a shared Nordic identity? These are some of the
questions the current volume seeks to answer. Covering the time
period from the early nineteenth century up until the present and
encompassing case studies from Britain, Spain, Poland, and South
Africa, as well as from the Nordic countries, contributors to the
volume investigate the images that have been presented of the
Nordic region in the media in and outside of the Nordic countries,
how such images have been shaped by mechanisms of mediation, and
the channels through which they have been distributed. The chapters
address both specific cases such as media events and individual
publications, as well as the structural and institutional settings
for mediating the Nordic region.
What makes a magazine in South Africa promote Scandinavian unity
among its immigrant readers and why does a Swedish king endorse
attempts to influence pan-Scandinavian opinion through a
transnational media event in Sweden, Norway and Denmark? Can
portraits of exotic Lapplanders in the British press, enthusiastic
accounts of the welfare state in post-war travel literature and
descriptions of the liberal Nordic woman as a metaphor for a freer
society in Franco Spain really be bundled together under a joint
label of 'Nordicness'? How is it that despite the variety of images
of the Nordic region that are circulating, we still find this
recurring idea of a shared Nordic identity? These are some of the
questions the current volume seeks to answer. Covering the time
period from the early nineteenth century up until the present and
encompassing case studies from Britain, Spain, Poland, and South
Africa, as well as from the Nordic countries, contributors to the
volume investigate the images that have been presented of the
Nordic region in the media in and outside of the Nordic countries,
how such images have been shaped by mechanisms of mediation, and
the channels through which they have been distributed. The chapters
address both specific cases such as media events and individual
publications, as well as the structural and institutional settings
for mediating the Nordic region.
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