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Nationalisms across the Globe
ISSN: 1662-9116
Although in the 1980s the widely shared belief was that nationalism had become a spent force, the fragmentation of the studiously non-national Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia in the 1990s into a multitude of successor nation-states reaffirmed its continuing significance. Today all extant polities (with the exception of the Vatican) are construed as nationstates, and hence nationalism is the sole universally accepted criterion of statehood legitimization. Similarly, human groups wishing to be recognized as fully fledged participants in international relations must define themselves as nations. This concept of world politics underscores the need for openended, broad-ranging, novel, and interdisciplinary research into nationalism and ethnicity. It promotes better understanding of the phenomena relating to social, political, and economic life, both past and present. This peer-reviewed series publishes monographs, conference proceedings, and collections of articles. It attracts well-researched, often interdisciplinary, studies which open new approaches to nationalism and ethnicity or focus on interesting case studies. The language of the series is usually English. The series is affiliated with the Institute for Transnational and Spatial History at the University of St Andrews, headed by Bernhard Struck and Tomasz Kamusella. The Institute gathers scholars with a strong interest in the comparative, entangled and transnational history of modern Europe and the globalized world. Editorial Board: Balazs Apor (Dublin) – Peter Burke (Cambridge) – Monika Baár (Groningen) – Andrea Graziosi (Naples) – Akihiro Iwashita (Sapporo) – Sławomir Łodziński (Warsaw) – Alexander Markarov (Yerevan) – Elena Marushiakova and Veselin Popov (Sofia) – Alexander Maxwell (Wellington) – Anastasia Mitrofanova (Moscow) – Michael Moser (Vienna) - Frank Lorenz Müller (St Andrews) – Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni (Pretoria) – Balázs Trencsényi (Budapest) – Sergei Zhuk (Muncie, Indiana).
21 publications
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Journalism in a Fractured World
©2025 Monographs -
The Margins of Journalism
©2025 Monographs -
Sociolinguistic Change Across the Spanish-Speaking World
Case Studies in Honor of Anna María Escobar©2015 Monographs -
Inside the Upheaval of Journalism
Reporters Look Back on 50 Years of Covering the News©2020 Textbook -
The Practice of Knowing and Knowing in Practices
©2016 Textbook -
Investigative Journalism in the United States
A History, with Profiles of Journalists and Writers Who Practiced the Form©2023 Monographs -
Remnants of Wehrmacht Soldiers
Burial and Commemoration Practices of German Soldiers of the Second World War in Russia and Europe, 1941 – 2023©2024 Monographs -
The Worlds of Mia Couto
©2020 Edited Collection -
The Digital Practices of African Americans
An Approach to Studying Cultural Change in the Information Society©2014 Monographs -
The Changing Education for Journalism and the Communication Occupations
The Impact of Labor Markets©2018 Textbook -
Pilgrimages to the Western Front of World War I
Historical Exemplars & Contemporary Practices©2025 Edited Collection