1989
DOI: 10.1080/01419870.1989.9993639
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The origins of nations

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Cited by 209 publications
(166 citation statements)
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“…It is therefore a performative category (Pérez-Agote, 1993): its production and reproduction is linked to its capacity for social mobilisation (Máiz, 1997). Ultimately, a nation is an imagined community (Anderson, 1983), formed by a group of individuals that identify between one another on the basis of very different attributes -including territoriality, volition, history, and ethnicity-according to the specific situation, and which is considered the sovereign subject of political power over a territory (Gellner, 1997;Núñez, 1998;Smith, 1989).…”
Section: Nationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is therefore a performative category (Pérez-Agote, 1993): its production and reproduction is linked to its capacity for social mobilisation (Máiz, 1997). Ultimately, a nation is an imagined community (Anderson, 1983), formed by a group of individuals that identify between one another on the basis of very different attributes -including territoriality, volition, history, and ethnicity-according to the specific situation, and which is considered the sovereign subject of political power over a territory (Gellner, 1997;Núñez, 1998;Smith, 1989).…”
Section: Nationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Es por eso que Guibernau (1997) producción y reproducción está ligada a la capacidad que tiene para la movilización social (Máiz, 1997). En definitiva, una nación es una comunidad imaginada (Anderson, 1983), integrada por un colectivo de individuos que se identifican entre sí en función de atributos muy variados -territorialidad, voluntad, historia, etnicidad-, según una coyuntura concreta, y que se consideran el sujeto soberano del poder político sobre un territorio (Gellner, 1997;Núñez, 1998;Smith, 1989).…”
Section: Las Nacionesunclassified
“…Parece innegable que la historia y los mitos compartidos son potentes aglutinadores para las naciones (Gellner, 1983;Horowitz, 1985;Smith, 1981Smith, y 1994, entre otros), pero la relación entre ambos no se agota con esta observación. Así pues, ¿en qué medida es la historia un componente esencial para la comprensión de las naciones y el nacionalismo?…”
Section: Revista De Estudios Políticos (Nueva éPoca)unclassified