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South Asian Nationalisms: Guest Editors' Introduction

Magnusson, Jan LU orcid and Korom, Frank J. (2021) In Asian Ethnology 80(1). p.5-18
Abstract
This article intends to raise questions related to nationalism in South Asia, while also addressing the rationale for this special issue. Is nationalism a monolithic construct based on a European precedent or is it something much larger that is developed pluralistically in a variety of contexts around the world? If the latter is true, which is our position, then how do we go about studying the various versions of global nationalism? We argue that good comparison is based on both similarity and difference. To make a case for multiple versions of nationalism, the articles included herein focus on the Indian Subcontinent. Each article looks at a particular country belonging to the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), the... (More)
This article intends to raise questions related to nationalism in South Asia, while also addressing the rationale for this special issue. Is nationalism a monolithic construct based on a European precedent or is it something much larger that is developed pluralistically in a variety of contexts around the world? If the latter is true, which is our position, then how do we go about studying the various versions of global nationalism? We argue that good comparison is based on both similarity and difference. To make a case for multiple versions of nationalism, the articles included herein focus on the Indian Subcontinent. Each article looks at a particular country belonging to the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), the intergovernmental group representing the geopolitical union of states in South Asia, which was founded in Dhaka, Bangladesh in 1985. The overall purpose of this collection of articles is to highlight the varieties of nationalism found in the region, with the goal of interrogating the idea of a singular form of nationalism inherited by postcolonial societies from their European colonizers.
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Abstract (Swedish)
This article intends to raise questions related to nationalism in South Asia, while
also addressing the rationale for this special issue. Is nationalism a monolithic
construct based on a European precedent or is it something much larger that is
developed pluralistically in a variety of contexts around the world? If the latter
is true, which is our position, then how do we go about studying the various
versions of global nationalism? We argue that good comparison is based on both
similarity and difference. To make a case for multiple versions of nationalism,
the articles included herein focus on the Indian Subcontinent. Each article looks
at a particular country belonging to the South Asian Association for... (More)
This article intends to raise questions related to nationalism in South Asia, while
also addressing the rationale for this special issue. Is nationalism a monolithic
construct based on a European precedent or is it something much larger that is
developed pluralistically in a variety of contexts around the world? If the latter
is true, which is our position, then how do we go about studying the various
versions of global nationalism? We argue that good comparison is based on both
similarity and difference. To make a case for multiple versions of nationalism,
the articles included herein focus on the Indian Subcontinent. Each article looks
at a particular country belonging to the South Asian Association for Regional
Cooperation (SAARC), the intergovernmental group representing the geopolitical
union of states in South Asia, which was founded in Dhaka, Bangladesh in 1985.
The overall purpose of this collection of articles is to highlight the varieties
of nationalism found in the region, with the goal of interrogating the idea of
a singular form of nationalism inherited by postcolonial societies from their
European colonizers. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
alternative title
Sydasiatiska nationalismer. Gästredaktörernas introduktion
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
hyphenation, nationalism, nation states, religion, SAAR, South Asia,vernacularization
in
Asian Ethnology
volume
80
issue
1
pages
14 pages
publisher
Nanzan University
ISSN
1882-6865
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
10fb77dd-9161-45ce-b0f4-7db43d8c8061
alternative location
https://asianethnology.org/articles/2323
date added to LUP
2025-01-14 17:37:13
date last changed
2025-04-04 15:18:46
@misc{10fb77dd-9161-45ce-b0f4-7db43d8c8061,
  abstract     = {{This article intends to raise questions related to nationalism in South Asia, while also addressing the rationale for this special issue. Is nationalism a monolithic construct based on a European precedent or is it something much larger that is developed pluralistically in a variety of contexts around the world? If the latter is true, which is our position, then how do we go about studying the various versions of global nationalism? We argue that good comparison is based on both similarity and difference. To make a case for multiple versions of nationalism, the articles included herein focus on the Indian Subcontinent. Each article looks at a particular country belonging to the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), the intergovernmental group representing the geopolitical union of states in South Asia, which was founded in Dhaka, Bangladesh in 1985. The overall purpose of this collection of articles is to highlight the varieties of nationalism found in the region, with the goal of interrogating the idea of a singular form of nationalism inherited by postcolonial societies from their European colonizers.<br/>}},
  author       = {{Magnusson, Jan and Korom, Frank J.}},
  issn         = {{1882-6865}},
  keywords     = {{hyphenation, nationalism, nation states, religion, SAAR, South Asia,vernacularization}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{5--18}},
  publisher    = {{Nanzan University}},
  series       = {{Asian Ethnology}},
  title        = {{South Asian Nationalisms: Guest Editors' Introduction}},
  url          = {{https://asianethnology.org/articles/2323}},
  volume       = {{80}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}