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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page research paper that examines the nationalism from several theoretical perspectives, focusing mainly on the work of Harold R. Isaacs in Idols of the Tribe. The writer attempts to answer the questions: how did the modern conception of nationalism form? What is a nation? What is a state? Why is ethnicity a force in building nations and in tearing them down? Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khnatthe.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
is a uniquely modern social phenomenon (Hutchinson and Smith 47). From this common ground, theorists proceed in multiple directions to answer questions such as how did the modern conception of
nationalism form? What is a nation? What is a state? Why is ethnicity a force in building nations and in tearing them down? An examination of various theoretical perspectives demonstrates
the wide variety of opinion that this field has attracted, looking specifically at the insightful work of Harold R. Isaacs in his text, Idols of the Tribe. First published
in 1975, Idols of the Tribe is considered to be a classic text on global pluralism and ethnicity. In this text, Isaacs examines the relationship between group identity and political
activism. Isaacs, looking at nationalism from the perspective of a social psychologist, focuses on the shared traits and histories that serve to create bonds between individuals (Beatty). In this text,
Idols of the Tribe, Isaacs endeavors to explain why individuals desire and seek out attachments; why they are drawn to groups (Beatty). Isaacs feels that one of the primary motivating
factors is a fear of being alone (Beatty). In the contemporary environment, Isaacs argues that society is being fragmenting into smaller and smaller divisions. Isaacs delves further into the processes
involved in group Isaacs neo-Freudian approach postulates a link between the individual and the group that forms the basis for the "quality and power of mans tribal solidarity, his
overwhelming urge to belong and identify himself with a tribe or nation and that groups system of beliefs (Beatty). In explaining this, Isaacs focuses on psychologist Erik Eriksons concept of
how community shapes individual development through the factors that composite the ethnic or the "basic group identity," such as physical characteristics; names and language; history and origins, religion, and nationality
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