birth of a nation

DRISCOLL, KEVIN

Birth of a Nation Cultures, Peoples, and States By Kevin Driscoll Dramatic as it has been, the failure of the West to find an adequate response to militant nationalism in Bosnia in the 1990s is...

...For it is in this movement from the defense of cultural specificity to a more assertive cultural differentiation, according to Gellner, that we can see nations being creat-ed—not out of thin air, but with enough deliberateness to cast doubt on the primordialist position...
...From there, with the aid of philosophers like Herder and later, Nietzsche, the leap to fullblown nationalism is not as far as one might think...
...The "cold, bloodless rationalism" of the Enlightenment, Gellner writes, seemed to many nineteenth-century Europeans a repudiation of "warmth and feeling...
...Recent decades have seen a profusion of academic studies of nationalism and its origins...
...So it was that the snake in the garden at Vienna became Versailles's eight-hundred-pound gorilla—the vaunted principle of self-determination, which the conferees would honor to such drastic effect...
...While decidedly unwieldy and less than enlightened, these feudal polities had the virtue of being free of nationally or ethnically motivated conflict...
...First advanced by literary figures who bridled at the intrusion of rationality into such intimate and subjective areas as love and beauty (Gellner cites Immanuel Kant's definition of love as "benevolence for duty's sake"), the Romantic movement quickly "extended the sphere of its influence from the personal to the political...
...Come 1918," writes Gellner, "the crucial standing of nationalism as a principle of political legitimacy is as self-evident as it had been irrelevant in 1815...
...As the agrarian age gave way to scientific-industrial society, and the hierarchies that had kept ethnic passions in check eroded, the seeds of nationalism were sown...
...Ernest Gellner, director of the Center for the Study of Nationalism in Prague when he died in 1995, is among the most distinguished of the modernists...
...Gellner himself defines nationalism as "a political principle which maintains that similarity of culture is the basic social bond...
...Other students of nationalism, notably Benedict Anderson and the journalist Anatol Lieven, have leveled the same charge at Gellner himself, but with little justification, judging by the present book, which gives full weight to nationalism's potent appeal: "The intensity and depth of feeling" it arouses, Gellner writes, is precisely what cries out to be explained...
...Perhaps the most valuable lines come in the concluding chapter, entitled "Practical Implications...
...What has this to do with nationalism...
...The fourth zone, the former Soviet Union, is a work in progress...
...It remains to be seen what shape nationalism will take in this part of Europe...
...Birth of a Nation Cultures, Peoples, and States By Kevin Driscoll Dramatic as it has been, the failure of the West to find an adequate response to militant nationalism in Bosnia in the 1990s is nothing new...
...On the whole," Gellner writes, "the handiwork of the peacemakers at Vienna had worn well...
...It was perhaps inevitable, then, that an alternative would spring up, as indeed happened with the emergence of Romanticism...
...Gellner points out that the Romantics "valued and praised feeling and specificity—above all cultural specificity...
...The imposition of the Soviet empire after the dissolution of its Tsarist predecessor delayed the arrival of nationalism...
...It collapsed at the first storm...
...Gellner is at pains, though, to differentiate himself from Kedourie (once his colleague at the London School of Economics), whose formulation he finds too simplistic...
...of the case advanced by Elie Ke-dourie in the first sentence of his book on the subject: "Nationalism is a doctrine invented in Europe at the beginning of the nineteenth century...
...Gellner identifies four contiguous zones in which historical, cultural, and organizational factors combined to produce distinctive marriages between state and culture...
...Nationalism's challenge here, according to Gellner, was to forge states to house the cultures—a task of political unification that, thanks to the absence of large ethnic minorities and the relative compactness of the territories, was accomplished fairly easily...
...By the early nineteenth century—even as statesmen were carving up the map of post-Napoleonic Europe at the Congress of Vienna, oblivious to any ethnic or nationalist considera-tions—the snake of nationalism was loose in the garden...
...It is in the third and fourth zones that matters become genuinely complicated...
...Gellner reveals here his acute awareness that, at bottom, the attempt to come to terms with nationalism—whether it be part of man's primordial past, or the relatively recent creation of ideologues—is a struggle to master what Isaiah Berlin (citing Kant) called "the crooked timber of humanity," from which, Kant reminds us, "no straight thing was ever made...
...And we have been struggling to put the collapse aright ever since...
...In the third, Eastern Europe excluding the former Soviet Union, there is a multiplicity of cultures and of states, few of which coincide...
...In place of the castes that defined social existence in the agrarian age, the Enlightenment offered up the brotherhood of man, a pallid abstraction without the power to compel men's minds and organize society...
...Gellner's study of nationalism, far broader and more nuanced than a brief review can convey, is an impressive accomplishment, drawing on philosophy, political science, history, theology, and literature...
...Most of this work defies ready categorization, but much of it relates to the debate between the primordialists—who argue that the roots of nationalism lie in man's ancient past, if not in his genetic wiring—and the modernists or con-structivists, who make some variant Kevin Driscoll is assistant book editor of the Washington Times...
...He continues, "Where reason is universal in its prescriptions, emotions are linked to specific communities, to 'cultures,' which are, precisely, associations engendered and sustained by shared sentiment, shared by members, and not shared by non-members...
...When you add myriad linguistic differences to the mix, according to Gellner, this region seems predestined for disaster under the impact of nationalism...
...In the agrarian age, rigid social hierarchies, essentially similar from one polity to another, defined men's place in the world...
...only when and where "men wanted the boundaries of social units and of cultures to converge...
...In the second zone, roughly the area of the old Holy Roman Empire, there were two cultures, the German and the Italian, but no states with which to pair them...
...As Ernest Gell-ner reminds us in Nationalism, it was the Versailles peace conference in 1918 that first gave real-world sanction to theories that had been percolating in academic and literary circles for almost a century...
...The idea that any ongoing, established political order deserves to be corrected, or even abolished, because it fails to satisfy an abstract principle (such as the 'self-determination of nations') is indeed absurd...
...Far more significant than the details of the peace settlement, writes Gellner, was its overall result: "The system of states set up at Versailles, in the name of the principle of self-determination, was appallingly fragile and feeble...
...These ideas did not wash over Europe in a single, even wave of nationalist sentiment...
...Despite the rapid rise of nationalist thought in the nineteenth century, nationalism hardly altered the European map drawn at Vienna...
...Indeed, the book's brevity belies its intellectual heft...
...Political stability is in itself a good," Gell-ner writes...
...Gellner points to the Enlightenment as one of the agents preparing the way...
...It has not arisen everywhere and in all ages...
...Even so, nationalism's dominance in ideology and in literature would more than compensate for its relative ineffectiveness on the ground...
...Thus, nationalism's effects in this zone were relatively mild...
...In the first zone, comprising Europe's Atlantic coast, state and culture developed in tandem and were both well established in nation states like England, France, Portugal, and Spain before nationalism came along...

Vol. 3 • April 1998 • No. 31


 
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