1st Edition

Asian Forms of the Nation

Edited By Stein Tonnesson, Hans Antlov Copyright 1996
    368 Pages
    by Routledge

    372 Pages
    by Routledge

    The general tendency among theorists in nationalism and national identity has been to assume that the modernization process in Asia and Africa is a kind of distorted reflection of a Western precedent; Asian forms of the nation have rarely been seen as independent, alternative models. Among today's leading theoreticians, there is a growing tendency to take Asia seriously, and to include Asian examples in the general discussion. The aim of the present collection is to build on and reinforce this tendency. It does not postulate any specifically Asian form of the nation, as opposed to a Western one. Rather, it seeks to demonstrate that in Asia, as well as in Europe, each nation forms a unique amalgam which can be compared fruitfully with others. History, culture and geography have posed various kinds of limits to what can be imagined (as Benedict Anderson puts it). The relationship between geographical space and national construction is explored in depth here.

    1: Asia in Theories of Nationalism and National Identity; 2: The Frontiers of Japanese Identity; 3: Maps and the Formation of the Geo-Body of Siam; 4: Annam and Vietnam in the New Indochinese Space, 1887–1945; 5: Gender and Nation in Hindu Nationalism; 6: Contradictions and Ambivalence in the Hindu Nationalist Discourse in West Bengal; 7: ‘This God-Forsaken Country': Filipino Images of the Nation; 8: Blood, Territory and National Identity in Himalayan States; 9: The Karen Making of a Nation; 10: Nationalism Transcending the State: Changing Conceptions of Chinese Identity; 11: The Construction of the Post-Colonial Subject in Malaysia; 12: Nations-of-Intent in Malaysia

    Biography

    Stein Tonnesson, Hans Antlov