ࡱ> _ RbjbjJJ 7Z(3b(3b( ((((((((8 )\|)4(nt)))))+++nnnnnnn$Ypsn*nu(+++"++*n(())n616161+()(8)n61+n6161h(k)`GI\.i^mn0n2j}s4/}shkkN}s(hm61+++*n*n61+++n++++}s+++++++++B J': European Nationalisms Professor Marcin Jarzbek IR221.2019FALL.86052 Room 110, Goergen Hall Tue, 3.25 PM  4.40 PM and Thu 2.35 PM and 4.40 PM E-mail: mjarzabe@ur.rochester.edu Office hours: Tue 2:15PM - 3:15 PM or by appointment Office: 101 Harkness Hall (The Skalny Center for Polish and Central European Studies) Background Regardless of the place on Earth, national identity is today dominant and unquestionable social category, imprinted in current human individual and collective identity, used broadly in the political, cultural and daily-life contexts. However, questions about the very origin of the national idea, its roots and evolution, as well as its meaning and possible future, still remain opened. What we know for sure, that rather marginal before 1800s, nationalism became central and dominant ideology within last two centuries. Current Europe, which was a cradle of at least modern nationalisms (if not nationalism tout court), gives as daily plenty of examples, why studying nationalism is still a challenge to understand the topic that daily affects lives of people, politics, economy, not mentioning culture and media. Moreover, nationalisms in Europe still shows their complex and specific characters, which differ them from nationalism in other part of the globe (like in the US). Instead of giving you fast and easy answers to the questions about nationalisms, this course will offer you possible, yet rather complex historical explanations and hypothesis. Instead of a fun- or insider-perspective we will try to find more distanced observers perspective, who is able to see complexities, peculiarities and paradoxes of the reality. Course Objectives, Perspectives, Approach, and Structure Main aim of the course is to give a basic of the relationship between "identity" and "nationalisms" in its historical development in Europe, especially since late 18th century. Taking into account different examples from the European history (France, Spain, and United Kingdom) the course will focus predominantly on modern Central and Eastern Europe (territories of former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and Austro-Hungarian Empire). Classes will be divided into three blocks of topics. First will deal with fundamental concepts of identity, nation and nationalism. Using different approaches and theories (modernism, ethno-symbolism, ethnic and civic nationalism etc.) of authors like Ernest Gellner, Anthony Smith, Miroslav Hroch, Ernest Renan, Rogers Brubaker, Antonina KBoskowska, it aims at applying those theories to both historical (in the second block of topics) and contemporary reality (in the third bloc). Beginning with pre-modern forms of national (noble nation), ethnic and other collective identities, the course will focus on the processes of formation modern nations in Europe and their consequences for the history of the region in 20th century. The class could have a mixed-form of a seminar and lecture, with students presentations on selected topic and readings, and discussions on theoretical and historical issues. Course Requirements There are four requirements of the course, each building on another. Each requirement constitutes a fraction of the final grade. Presence in the class (4 absences possible) One report (protocol, minutes) on previous class (ca. 5-10 minutes) 10 per cent of final grade One-two presentations based on readings 20 per cent each Mid-term in-class exam 20 per cent Case-study final paper (analysis): 3-6 pages + bibliography (1 page) 30 per cent (additional 0-5 per cent for an active participation in the class discussions) Structure and form of the presentation: Time: 8-15 minutes Form: any (Power Point / Prezi, handouts, blackboard notes) Content: About the author Contexts (possible: whole book, other authors, methodology, time and place) Main arguments & the thesis of a text a brief summary Your own comments, questions for discussions Mid-term exam will take place on October 10. It will be an open-book exam. Your task will be to answer few open questions about the theories of nationalism and national identity that were discussed during the course. Deadline for the final paper is December 14, 10.00 PM (please, send on: mjarzabe@ur.rochester.edu) The case-study final paper must be a study of one, or more, cases of nationalism / national identity / national formation in Europe, focusing on a chosen problem. It should have 3-6 pages of standardized text (plus bibliography) and follow the rules of standard academic papers, particularly using references and listing literature and other sources. The criteria of evaluation will include: (1) structure, (2) clarity of the argument, (3) analytical and critical faculty, (4) use of literature and other sources, and (5) writing style (clarity, punctuation, grammar, referencing, bibliography and other sources). In order to receive a positive final grade, all components of it must be positive, i.e. between A and D. The scale is: 10095 per cent = A, 9490 per cent = A-, 8985 per cent = B+, 8480 per cent = B, 7975 per cent = B-, 7470 per cent = C+, 6965 per cent = C, 6460 per cent = D, less than 60 per cent = E. Prerequisites No previous knowledge of any aspect of the course is required. Academic Honesty:  HYPERLINK "http://www.rochester.edu/College/honesty/"www.rochester.edu/College/honesty/ Readings Required reading will be accessible on the Blackboard. Extended, or context readings can be reached in the Rush Rhees Library or online via the Library system Students are obliged to study the required reading or readings for each class. Bibliography Anderson, Benedict. Imagined Communities. Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. London and New York: Verso, 1997 [1983]. Slovakia in History. Eds. Mikula Teich, Duaan Kov , Martin D. Brown. Cambridge, CUP, 2011. Billig, Michael. Banal Nationalism. London: Sage Publications, 1995. Bjork, James. Neither German, nor Pole: Catholicism and National Indifference on a Central European Borderland. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2008 Brooks, Simon. "How Liberalism Assimilates Minoritiess. The failure to develop a Welsh national movement in the nineteenth century". Studies on National Movements 2 (2014). Discourses of Collective Identity in Central and Southeast Europe: Texts and Commentaries. Eds. Balzs Trncsenyi et al. Vol. 1-4. Budapest and New York: Central University Press, 2006-2014. Eile, StanisBaw. Literature and Nationalism in Partitioned Poland, 1795-1918. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2000. Gellner, Ernest. Nations and Nationalism. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1983. Gellner, Ernest. Nationalism. Washington Square, NY: New York University Press, 1997. Hobsbawm, Eric. Nations and nationalism since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality. Cambridge: CUP, 1992. Hroch, Miroslav. Social Preconditions of National Revival in Europe. A Comparative Analysis of the Social Composition of Patriotic Groups among the Smaller European Nations. Transl. Ben Fowkes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985 [1968]. Kamusella, Tomasz. Silesia and Central European Nationalisms: The emergence of national and ethnic groups in Prussian Silesia, 1848-1918. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2007. Karady, Viktor. The Jews of Europe in the Modern Era. A Socio-historical Outline. Budapest and New York: Central European University Press, 2004. King, Jeremy. Budweisers into Czech and Germans: Local History of Bohemian Politics, 1848-1948. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002. Llobera, Josep. Foundations of National Identity: From Catalonia to Europe. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2004. Mosse, George L. The Nationalization of the Masses: Political Symbolism and Mass Movements in Germany from the Napoleonic Wars through the Third Reich. New York: Howard Fertig, 1975. Porter, Brian. When Nationalism Began to Hate: Imaging Modern Politics in Nineteenth Century Poland. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. Rozenblit, Marsha. Reconstructing National Identity. The Jews of Habsburg Austria during World War I. Oxford: OUP, 2001. Sahlins, Peter.Boundaries: The Making of France and Spain in the Pyrenees. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1989. Smith, Anthony. Ethno-symbolism and Nationalism: A Cultural Approach. London and New York: Routledge, 2009. Smith, Anthony. The Ethnic Origins of Nations. New York: Basil Blackwell, 1986. Snyder, Timothy. The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus 1569-1999. New Heaven and London: Yale University Press, 1999. Tazbir, Janusz. "Polish National Consciousness in the 16th to 18th Century". Acta Poloniae Historica 46 (1982). The Invention of Tradition. Eds. Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger. Cambride: CUP, 1983. The Oxford Handbook of the History of Nationalism. Ed. John Breuilly. Oxford: OUP, 2013. Walicki, Andrzej. Philosophy and Romantic Nationalism: the Case of Poland. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1982. Weber, Eugen. Peasants into Frenchmen. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1976. Wilson, Timothy. Frontiers of Violence: Conflict and Identity in Ulster and Upper Silesia 1918-1922. Oxford: OUP, 2010. Zahra, Tara. Kidnapped Souls: National Indifference and the Battle for Children in the Bohemian Lands, 19001948. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2008. Books accessible online: Eugen Weber, Peasants into Frenchmen Anthony Smith, Nationalism and Modernism Anthony Smith, The Cultural Foundations of Nations : Hierarchy, Covenant, and Republic The Invention of Tradition Eric Hobsbawm, Nations and Nationalism since 1780 *,.B`b " f j A B M O 9 ƳwlalVlalKhJhBpB*phhJhqB*phhJhbI]B*phhJhp!B*phhJh<^5B*phh#oh%B*CJph!h#oh%B*CJmHphsH!h#oh<^B*CJmHphsH$h#oh%5B*CJmHphsH$h#oh<^5B*CJmHphsHhJh<^B*phh#oh<^B*CJphh#oh%5B*CJph,.b" h @ A B N O T$l$a$gdW-.l$a$gdiMMl8^8gdiMM$a$gdnY$$ ` f g &_uw&'FPjl|ӰvkhJhBpmH sH hJhiMMH*mH sH hJhJmH sH hJhiMMmH sH hJh<^B*phhJh<^5B*phhJhp!B*phhJhJB*phhJhbI]6B*phhJhbI]B*phhJhqB*phhJhBpB*phhJhnYB*ph(&HJU\,-gh./0FVXkl꽰||||||o`||hJhp!B*mHphsHhJhp!5B*phhJh6$B*phhJB*phhJhp!B*phhJh<^B*phhJh<^mH sH hJh<^5B*phhJhW-.mH sH hJhiMMH*mH sH hJhJmH sH hJhnYmH sH hJhiMMmH sH hJhp!mH sH %-h/0XlJxz{TU $a$gd#o & Fgdp! & Fgdp! & Fgdp!IJwxyz{SU[VYfʿڲzڧrrrrrehJh<^5B*phhGB*phhJhp!5B*phhJh<^B*phhJhBp>*B*phh;B*phhJhBpB*phhJhBp5B*phhJhJB*phhJB*phhp!B*phhJhp!B*phhJh6$B*phhJhp!B*mHphsH'XYgh"#& ( D F V!"M""#$%%&{&&'gdezgd#of!#34 & ( B D F n !T!V!|!ܺ}yrjrcUhJh:t6]nH tH  hJhChJh:t6 hJh:th#ohJh%5B*\phh#o5B*\phhJh<^56B*phhJhBpB*phhJhW-.B*phhJh<^0JHB*phjhJh<^U hJh<^jhJh<^UhJh<^5B*phhJh<^B*ph|!!"""*"M"[""""p#####$$H%%%%&$&%&6&C&X&s&z&{&ƽƲzlea]X]Q]Q h#oh#o h#o6h#oh:t hJh.hJh:t6]nH tH hJhCnH tH hJhC6nH tH #hJh:t6B*]nH phtH hJh:tB*nH phtH hezheznH tH hez6nH tH heznH tH hJh:t6 hJh:thJhBpnH tH hJh:tnH tH hJh:t]nH tH {&&&&&i'n''''''(](_(q(r((((((&)4)7)O))))* *)*5*F**ѻѫʍ{хpdhezh(6nH tH hJh(nH tH hJh:t6]hJh:t] hez6] hez]hJhrb6]hJhrb]h;h;]h;h#o] h#o]h;h;6] h;6] h;]h#ohJh.6hJh:t6 hJh:thJh_6 hJh_"'(&))5**y++,,<--?...Z//(0000 151111*P l & F*$gdWlgdWgdezgd;*****P+y++++++++,<,,,,,,,,,-<-M-b-c---ҽҽwpiaiWOWOh;h:t6h;h:t6]h;h(6 hJh( hJh.hezh:t6#hezh:t6B*]nH phtH hJhrbB*nH phtH hJh:tB*nH phtH h#ohezh:t6] hJh:thezh:t6]nH tH hJh:tnH tH hJh(nH tH hJhrbnH tH hezhrb6nH tH ----.3.>.?.Y.Z..../9/X/Y/Z/h/////////ܼ簥ܗ܏܀n]L]L]Ch;]nH tH  hJh.B*]nH phtH  hJh:tB*]nH phtH #hezh:t6B*]nH phtH hJh:tB*nH phtH heznH tH hezh:t6]nH tH hJhrbnH tH hezhrb6nH tH hezh:t6]h;nH tH h;h:t6]nH tH hJh:tnH tH  hJh:thJh:t]h;h:t6]/0'0(05000001PQQ&Q>?RRRRRRRRRRRRRRø尨ո<^h<^mHnHsHtHjh<^Uh{(jh{(U hJh<^hlbh<^B*ph hezhezhez6nH tH h#oheznH tH hWU hJhWheznH tH hJh:tnH tH hezh:t6]nH tH hJh:t]nH tH h#oh;]nH tH h#o]nH tH h#oh;6]nH tH  Timothy Snyder, Reconstruction of Nations Timothy Snyder, Bloodlands Jeremy King, Budweisers into Czechs and Germans Brian Porter, When nationalism began to hate: imagining modern politics in nineteenth century Poland Encyclopedia of Nationalism: Leaders, Movements, and Concepts Bjork, James. Neither German, nor Pole Books accessible (reserved) in the Library: Miroslav Hroch, Social preconditions of national revival in Europe: a comparative analysis of the social composition of patriotic groups among the smaller European nations Ernest Gellner, Nations and Nationalism The Oxford Handbook of the History of Nationalism. Ed. 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