Books
Hroch, Miroslav (2015). European Nations. London: Verso (Chapters 3 and 5 are not part of the curriculum). 215 p
Smith, Anthony D. (2010). Nationalism. Theory, ideology, history. Oxford: Polity. Ch. 1–4. 82 p
Compendium
Anderson, Benedict (1991). Imagined communities. London: Verso, ch. 1, ch 3. 17 p
Brubaker. Rogers (2004). Ethnicity Without Groups, Cambridge: Harvard Uiversity Press, ch. 1. 20 p
Brubaker, Rogers (2015) Ch. 3: Language, Religion and the Politics of Difference in Grounds for Difference. 85-101 (17p) Harvard University Press
Drulak, Petr (2012). Czech geopolitics: Struggling for survival, in Guzzini, S. (ed.) The Return of Geopolitics in Europe? Social Mechanisms and Foreign Policy Identity Crises. Cambridge Uni Press, pp. 77-100. 24 p
Eriksen, Anne (2007). The private use of flags in Norway, in Thomas Hylland Eriksen & Richard Jenkings (eds.), Flag, nation and symbolism in Europe and America. London: Routledge. 13 p
Ernest Renan Qu'est-ce qu'une nation? [What is a nation?], in J. Hutchinson & A.D. Smith (eds.). Nationalism. Oxford: Oxford Readers
Foster, Mira (2013) ‘Divided Identities: Listening to and Interpreting the Stories of Polish Immigrants in West Germany’, in: Spickard, P. (ed.) Multiple Identities. Migrants, Ethnicity, and Membership. Bloomington: Indiana University Press., pp. 245-64. 20 p
Gellner, Ernest (1983). Nations and Nationalism. Oxford: Blackwell, Ch. 1, 5. 17 p
Goff, Patricia and Kevin Dunn (2004). Introduction: In Defense of Identity, in Goff (ed.) Identity and Global Politics. Empirical and Theoretical Elaborations. Palgrave, pp. 1-8.
Grimnes, Ole Kristian (2007). Nationalism and Unionism in nineteenth-century Norwegian flags, in Thomas Hylland Eriksen & Richard Jenkings (eds.), Flag, nation and symbolism in Europe and America. London: Routledge. 11 p
Hobsbawm, Eric J. (1992). Nations and nationalism since 1780. Programme, myth, reality, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, kap. 2. 34 p
Hobsbawm, Eric J. and Ranger, Terence (1992). The invention of tradition. New York: Cambridge University Press, kap. 1 'Introduction. Inventing traditions'. 14 p
Hutchinson, John (1994). Modern nationalism. London, Fontana, Ch. 2. 24 p
Ignatieff, M. (1993) Blood and Belonging. Journeys into the New Nationalism, London: BBC Books , ch. 3. 39 p
Jackson,Patrick T. (2004). Whose Identity?: Rhetorical Commonplaces in “American” Wartime Foreign Policy, in Goff (ed.) Identity and Global Politics. Empirical and Theoretical Elaborations. Palgrave, pp. 169-189. 21 p
Judson, Pieter M. (2014). “Do Multiple Languages Mean a Multicultural Society? Nationalist ‘Frontiers’ in Rural Austria, 1880-1918” in Gary B. Cohen & Johannes Feichtinger, eds. Understanding Multiculturalism and the Central European Experience. Oxford: Berghahn, 61-82. 21 p
Kymlicka, Will (2003) Politics in the Vernacular: Nationalism, Multiculturalism, and Citizenship, ch. 10, 12, 15. 45 p
Roshwald, Aviel (2001). Ethnic Nationalism and the Fall of Empires. Central Europe, Russia and the Middle East, New York: Routledge, ch. 2 and 3, pp. 8-28 and 34-46. 32 p
Smith, Anthony D. (1998). Nationalism and modernism. A critical survey of recent theories of nations and nationalism. London & New York: Routledge, Ch. 8. 28 p
Stalin, Joseph: The Nation;
S?rensen, ?ystein (1994). The development of a Norwegian National Identity during the Nineteenth Century, in ?. S?rensen (ed). Nordic Paths to National Identity in the Nineteenth Century. Oslo: NFR. 19 p
Weber, Max: The Nation. 9 p
Zubrzycki, Genevieve (2006) The Crosses of Auschwitz: Nationalism and Religion in Post-Communist Poland, Chicago UCP, ch. 1. 42 p
?sterud, ?yvind (1996). Norwegian Nationalism in a European context, Kults skriftserie no. 47. Oslo: NFR. 10 p
?zkirimli, Umut (2017). Primordialism/Perennialism, Ch. 3 in Theories of Nationalism. A critical introduction. London:Palgrave. 30p
Online articles
Bakke, Elisabeth (1999). Doomed to failure? PhD dissertation, Ch. 6-7. 36 p
Bakke, Elisabeth (2011). Czechoslovakism in Slovak history, i Mikulá? Teich, Du?an Ková? & Martin D. Brown (ed.), Slovakia in History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 22 p
Brubaker, Rogers and Frederick Cooper (2000). Beyond "Identity'', Theory and Society, Vol. 29, No. 1 (Feb., 2000). pp. 1-47.
Erdal, Marta Bivand (2014) 'This is my home' Pakistani and Polish Migrants’ Return Considerations as Articulations About ‘Home’, Comparative Migration Studies 2(3): 361–384. 24p
Hylland Eriksen, Thomas (2004). Keeping the recipe: Norwegian folk costumes and cultural capital, Focaal, Volume 2004, Number 44, Winter 2004, pp. 20-34. 15 p
Mudde, Cas (2010). "The Populist Radical Right: A Pathological Normalcy", West European Politics 33(6): 1167-1186. 19 p
Pieterse, Jan N. (1997), Deconstructing/Reconstructing Ethnicity. Nations and Nationalism, 3: 365–395. 30 p
Porter, Brian A. (1992). Who Is a Pole and Where Is Poland? Territory and Nation in the Rhetoric of Polish National Democracy before 1905. Slavic Review 51, no. 4 (Winter 1992): 639–653. 15 p
Pytlas, Bartek (2013). Radical-right narratives in Slovakia and Hungary: historical legacies, mythic overlaying and contemporary politics. Patterns of Prejudice, 01 May 2013, Vol.47(2). p.162-183. 20 p
Rydgren, Jens (2007) "The Sociology of Radical Right", Annual Review of Sociology 33(1):241 -262. 21 p
Winters, Stanley B. (1969). The Young Czech Party (1874-1914). An Appraisal. Slavic Review, Vol. 28, No. 3 (Sep., 1969). pp. 426-444. 18 p
Wodak, Ruth (2006). 'Discourse Analytic and Socio-linguistic Approaches to the Study of Nation(alism)’ in: Delanty, G. and K. Kumar Handbook of Nations and Nationalism, London: SAGE. 11 p
?zkirimli, Umut (2003). 'The nation as an artichoke? A critique of ethnosymbolist interpretations of nationalism', Nations and Nationalism, 9: 339–355. 15 p
Total required reading: 1115 p
Suggested Reading:
Brubaker, Rogers (2015), Language, Religion and the Politics of Difference, in Brubaker, Grounds for Difference, Harvard Uni Press , pp. 85-101
Semb, Anne Julie (2005). Sami self-determination in the making?, in Nations and Nationalism 11 (4), 2005: 539-549.
Online articles:
- are available through the University Library databases.
- are limited to computers that are connected UiO's network. You can get access from home and when travelling.
- are easy to find. Tutorials and help to access journals and other restricted library Resources