Drawing on the concept of uneven and combined development this article critically interrogates Benedict Anderson’s theory of the ‘imagined community’ through an historical investigation into the English-realm-cum-British-empire. Placing its rise in the context of the conflicts of Post-Reformation Europe, it identifies vectors of combined development (money, goods, ideas, people) which shaped the formation of new imagined communities. These post-Reformation struggles were not defined by nationality but subjecthood, which saw ‘the realm’ displace the monarch as an object of rights and duties. The 18th century rise of British nationalism was a response to the long crisis of subjecthood (1639–1688). However, this emergence was uneven and non-li...
Benedict Anderson defined the nation as “an imagined political community” that is “imagined as both ...
The article investigates how, in early modern England, the literature of the period contributed to i...
Abstract This article concentrates on the British dimension of the collective identity of the Scott...
Drawing on the concept of uneven and combined development this article critically interrogates Bened...
This thesis explores the supposed development of an 'imagined community' of the British during the ...
This dissertation examines the concept of “imagined communities” outlined by Benedict Anderson in or...
The growth of public and academic interest in Englishness has raised important questions about post-...
When the states of England and Scotland combined in 1707, the conditions were created whereby Englis...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180
UID/CPO/04627/2013The article examines Benedict Anderson's contribution to studies of the nation and...
The chapter defines key terms before going on to examine various manifestations of nationalism, usin...
This article deals with the validity of Anderson’s definition of imagined communities and the future...
This article compares the ways in which references to ‘the (British) Empire’ were constructed and us...
This article deals with the validity of Anderson’s definition of imagined communities and the future...
The article deals with the analysis of the philosophical assumptions of Benedict Anderson's theory o...
Benedict Anderson defined the nation as “an imagined political community” that is “imagined as both ...
The article investigates how, in early modern England, the literature of the period contributed to i...
Abstract This article concentrates on the British dimension of the collective identity of the Scott...
Drawing on the concept of uneven and combined development this article critically interrogates Bened...
This thesis explores the supposed development of an 'imagined community' of the British during the ...
This dissertation examines the concept of “imagined communities” outlined by Benedict Anderson in or...
The growth of public and academic interest in Englishness has raised important questions about post-...
When the states of England and Scotland combined in 1707, the conditions were created whereby Englis...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180
UID/CPO/04627/2013The article examines Benedict Anderson's contribution to studies of the nation and...
The chapter defines key terms before going on to examine various manifestations of nationalism, usin...
This article deals with the validity of Anderson’s definition of imagined communities and the future...
This article compares the ways in which references to ‘the (British) Empire’ were constructed and us...
This article deals with the validity of Anderson’s definition of imagined communities and the future...
The article deals with the analysis of the philosophical assumptions of Benedict Anderson's theory o...
Benedict Anderson defined the nation as “an imagined political community” that is “imagined as both ...
The article investigates how, in early modern England, the literature of the period contributed to i...
Abstract This article concentrates on the British dimension of the collective identity of the Scott...