Why has nationalism become one of the most powerful and widespread political forces of our century? And why has the national ideal triumphed over its rivals? In this book, Dr. Anthony Smith explores its fundamental and enduring appeal in the modern world, by systematically comparing nationalism with other ideologies like millennialism, fascism, racism and communism. Nationalism, he argues, flourishes today because of the pressures and effects of modern conditions on ancient ethnic ties and sentiments. Far from dissipating these mass sentiments, as one might have expected, modern bureaucracy, science and internationalism have only inflamed them, causing many to protest against their impersonal rationalism. At the same time, nationalism is revealed as an infinitely flexible and adaptable political movement. Unlike communism, racism or fascism, it is not tied to specific dogmas, classes, periods or countries. Nationalism can accommodate itself to the most diverse A social backgrounds and contrasting N environments, and appear as their natural outgrowth. Everywhere its propagators T among the intelligentsia have used it to H secure the often passionate, but always enduring, support of different classes O among their compatriots. So varied in its N forms, so easy to identify with the tasks of modernisation, and so indispensable as an Y instrument for mobilising all kinds of people, nationalism can frequently absorb rival D movements like communism or racism, without losing its basic vision or profoundly . practical momentum. S Hence it is unlikely to wither away. Even in M the heavily industrialised states of the West I with their well-educated citizenry, ethnic T nationalism has recently experienced a H resurgence. Having overcome the challenges of communism and fascism in our century to a very considerable extent, nationalism today is built into the fabric of the international order. Both in the West and in the developing countries, the national ideal is likely to command men’s loyalties for the foreseeable future. ANTHONY D. SMITH Jacket Design: Pentegraphic Design Associates Why has nationalism become one of the most powerful and widespread political forces of our century? And why has the national ideal triumphed over its rivals? In this book, Dr. Anthony Smith explores its fundamental and enduring appeal in the modern world, by systematically comparing nationalism with other ideologies like millennialism, fascism, racism and communism. Nationalism, he argues, flourishes today because of the pressures and effects of modern conditions on ancient ethnic ties and sentiments. Far from dissipating these mass sentiments, as one might have expected, modern bureaucracy, science and internationalism have only inflamed them, causing many to protest against their impersonal rationalism. At the same time, nationalism is revealed as an infinitely flexible and adaptable political movement. Unlike communism, racism or fascism, it is not tied to specific dogmas, classes, periods or countries. Nationalism can accommodate itself to the most diverse A social backgrounds and contrasting N environments, and appear as their natural outgrowth. Everywhere its propagators T among the intelligentsia have used it to H secure the often passionate, but always enduring, support of different classes O among their compatriots. So varied in its N forms, so easy to identify with the tasks of modernisation, and so indispensable as an Y instrument for mobilising all kinds of people, nationalism can frequently absorb rival D movements like communism or racism, without losing its basic vision or profoundly . practical momentum. S Hence it is unlikely to wither away. Even in M the heavily industrialised states of the West I with their well-educated citizenry, ethnic T nationalism has recently experienced a H resurgence. Having overcome the challenges of communism and fascism in our century to a very considerable extent, nationalism today is built into the fabric of the international order. Both in the West and in the developing countries, the national ideal is likely to command men’s loyalties for the foreseeable future. ANTHONY D. SMITH Jacket Design: Pentegraphic Design Associates This book was published by ANU Press between 1965–1991. This republication is part of the digitisation project being carried out by Scholarly Information Services/Library and ANU Press. This project aims to make past scholarly works published by The Australian National University available to a global audience under its open-access policy. Nationalism in the Twentieth Century Nationalism in the Tw entieth Century Anthony D. S. Smith Australian National University Press CANBERRA 1979 © Anthony D. S. Smith 1979 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, photocopy ing, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright holder First published in 1979 in Australia by Australian National University Press National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-I'ublicafion entry Smith, Anthony Douglas S., 1933- Nationalism in the Twentieth Century. Index. Simultaneously published, Oxford, Eng.: Martin Robertson; New York: New York University Press. Bibliography. ISBN o 7081 1819 4 I. Nationalism—History—20th century I. Title 320.54^904 Phototypeset by Santype Ltd. Salisbury Printed and bound by Richard Clay at The Chaucer Press, Bungay Contents Preface Page vii CHAPTER I The Development of the National i Ideal Enlighteners and romantics; Radicals and tradition alists; I mperialism and secession; Populism and anti-col onialism; The unity of nationalism CHAPTER 2 Nationalism and the Millennium 14 Millennial roots; Modernist themes; Neo-traditional ism, reformism and assimilation; Messianic elements CHAPTER 3 The Fascist Challenge Industrial tribalism; The concept of the nation; The cult of violence; Nationalism and fascism compared; Historical links; Volk and race; The Nazi reversal; Ir rationalism and the Great War; Conclusion CHAPTER 4 Colour, Race and National Identity 86 Nationalism, racism and ethnocentrism; Racial chal lenges to nationalism; Colour and pan-African identity CHAPTER 5 Communist Nationalisms 115 Modes of alienation; Mechanisms of the transition; Communism and nationhood ; Delayed development and power dependency; Populism and the intellectuals; At tractions of Marxist ‘ self-realisation ”; An uneasy symbio sis; The nationalisation of Marxism CHAPTER 6 Ethnic Resurgence in the West Minorities and ‘mass society’; The resurgence of national ism; Autonomists and separatists; The new technical intelligentsia; Underdevelopment and historicity; Im perial demise and democratic failure; Conclusion vi Contents 7 The Bureaucratic Cycle 166 chapter Two senses of* nation’; Bureaucratic nationalism; Home lessness and anarchy; The new romanticism; The fascist alternative; The bureaucratic cycle; The nation as buffer 8 Internationalism 184 chapter ‘Satisfied’ nationalisms? In a world of nation-states; Consequences of international disruptions; Supra nationalem; Conclusion Notes 198 Bibliography 229 Index 245 Preface The breakdown of tradition and religious authority in many parts of the world has encouraged a search for new kinds of salvation and progress. Some of these salvation routes are personal and individual, others are social and communal. Of the communal ideologies, some are limited and localised in their objectives, while others make more universal and global claims. Perhaps the most important and enduring of the more limited modern ideologies is nationalism. Nationalism combines a pro gramme on behalf of a specific community with a more universal vision of culture-groups. It therefore stands midway between purely local movements like populism and nativism, and the great ‘world salvation’ ideologies of racial fascism and socialism or communism. It also differs from these more universal ideologies in basing itself on a pre-existing mass sentiment, and in emphasising practical construction at the expense of utopian or chiliastic visions. My aim in this book is to chart the relationships, conceptual and historical, between nationalism and other ideologies, notably fascism and communism, and to explain some of the reasons why nationalism continues to appeal to so many people in different parts of the world today. Nationalism in the twentieth century has survived the challenges posed by fascism, racism and com munism, and is now experiencing something of a resurgence. The movement and ideology has also undergone an unusual expansion and diversification, both in content and organisation. Today we can find every type of nationalism, from ethnic separatism and conservative bureaucratic nationalisms in the West to the populist and communist nationalisms of some developing countries. Yet the ‘nationalist’ colour of these varied movements is readily discern ible, and the nationalist component nearly always predominates over others. viii Preface Both analytically and chronologically, the book continues my earlier discussion of approaches and typologies of nationalism in Theories of Nationalism. It elaborates the basic definitions of national ism arrived at in the earlier work, and seeks to demonstrate the varied guises under which nationalism has appeared in our century. It does so by contrasting nationalist ideas and activities with those of other, related, movements, as well as by relating those ideas and activities to their specific social and cultural contexts. The aim throughout remains analytic and comparative, in the belief that these tasks are prerequisites to evolving any more general theories of the whole phenomenon of nationalism. The task of a general theory must await further studies of the origins of national ism. Instead, my aim here is to chart the later developments of the nationalist movement as a whole by examining crucial ‘moments’ in its career during our century, and in the final chapters to offer some hypotheses about the general conditions of the persistence of nationalism today, conditions that, I would argue, are no longer identical with those that fostered the initial emergence of nationalism whether in eighteenth-century Europe or in nineteenth-century Asia, or even in early twentieth-century Africa. For, although cer tain elements of those initial conditions have persisted in a general manner, their forms have changed; and other elements, indeed new conditions, have made themselves felt, influencing the course of nationalism and hastening its resurgence. For this reason it becomes necessary to develop models and theories of the persistence and revival of nationalism, both at a general and at a regional level. These general considerations of method have accordingly deter mined the structure of the book. In the first two chapters I aim to set out the main strands in contemporary nationalist ideologies. The first chapter recapitulates the main assumptions inherent in all nationalist thought, and analyses how national ideals were inter preted and expanded by varying groups in different situations during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The second chapter elucidates further some of the chief motifs of nationalism by juxtaposing its ideals to the chiliastic visions of older religious millennialisms. Contrary to some opinions, nationalism is revealed as an optimistic, secular and practical ideology, far removed in spirit from the supernaturalist pessimism of millennial movements. The next three chapters examine the main challenges to national-
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