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The Bivocal Nation: Memory and Identity on the Edge of Empire

Autor Nutsa Batiashvili
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 oct 2017
This book is about a divided nation and polarized nationhood. Its principal purpose is to examine division and polarization as forms of imagining that are configured within culture and framed by history. This is what bivocality signifies—two distinct discursive voices through which nationhood is articulated; voices that are nonetheless grounded in a culturally common symbolic field. The volume offers an ethnographically centered analysis of the ways in which Georgians make use of these voices in critical discourses of nationhood. By illuminating the cultural semantics behind these discourses, Nutsa Batiashvili offers a new constellation of conceptual terms for understanding modern forms of nationalism and nation-building in the marginal or liminal landscapes between the Orient and the Occident.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783319622859
ISBN-10: 3319622854
Pagini: 195
Ilustrații: XXV, 195 p. 12 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2018
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Introduction: What Kind of Imagined Community? A Community of Voices.- 1. We, Us, Ourselves and Our Others.- 2. We Were Always United, Except When We Were Not.- 3. Things Coded in Our Genetic Memory.- 4. Horizons, Margins and Centers of Nation-Making in the 19th Century Georgia.- 5. "It’s a Poor Sort of Memory that Only Works Backwards."- 6. Libri Magni or the Book that will Stop the War.

Recenzii

“While history is a widespread topic and popular reference point, it also has a distinctive discursive tradition in Georgia, which Nutsa Batiashvili masterfully dissects in this book. Using an impressive variety of sources, from school textbooks and statements by politicians and academics to fieldwork interviews … she presents a colourful picture of the memory debates of the last decades … . If you want to understand what’s behind them and how Georgia ticks, you must read Nutsa Batiashvili’s book.” (Hubertus Jahn, Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas. jgo.e-reviews, Vol. 70 (1), 2022)

Notă biografică

Nutsa Batiashvili is Assistant Professor at the Free University of Tbilisi, Georgia. 


Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book is about a divided nation and polarized nationhood. Its principal purpose is to examine division and polarization as forms of imagining that are configured within culture and framed by history. This is what bivocality signifies—two distinct discursive voices through which nationhood is articulated; voices that are nonetheless grounded in a culturally common symbolic field. The volume offers an ethnographically centered analysis of the ways in which Georgians make use of these voices in critical discourses of nationhood. By illuminating the cultural semantics behind these discourses, Nutsa Batiashvili offers a new constellation of conceptual terms for understanding modern forms of nationalism and nation-building in the marginal or liminal landscapes between the "Orient" and the "Occident."

Caracteristici

Offers a distinct approach to understanding how geopolitical issues, like Russian-Georgian relations, are made sense of through culturally embedded practices Fills a gap in the existing literature by exploring the cultural undercurrents of political processes from the anthropological perspective Offers contributions not only to the field political ethnography, but also to the theory of the nation-state in post-imperial contexts as well as to the nexus of memory and politics