Civic nationalism: Oxymoron?

Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 10 (2):213-231 (1996)
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Abstract

Recent attempts to distinguish a normatively acceptable “civic nationalism"—as distinct from an irrationally tainted “ethnic nationalism"—have failed to take seriously the implications of the transition from the city as the immediate spatial unit of the patria to the more abstract national state that replaced it. The nation‐state has required a mythologizing naturalism to legitimate it, thus blurring the distinction between “civic” and “ethnic.” The urban political experience of the patria is lost to us; cosmopolitan intellectuals should resist the comforting temptation to recover it in the nation, and should recognize civic nationalism for the oxymoron it is.

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References found in this work

Liberal Nationalism.Yael Tamir - 1995 - Princeton University Press.
The Family Romance of the French Revolution.Lynn Hunt - 1995 - Diderot Studies 26:298-299.
Machiavelli in hell.Sebastian De Grazia - 1989 - Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
Chief works, and others.Niccolò Machiavelli - 1965 - Durham, N.C.,: Duke University Press. Edited by Allan H. Gilbert.

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