1st Edition

Nation and Identity

By Ross Poole Copyright 1999
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    Nation and Identity provides a concise and comprehensive account of the place of national identity in modern life. Ross Poole argues that the nation became a fundamental organising principle of social, political and moral life during the period of early modernity and that is has provided the organising principle of much liberal, republican and democratic thought.
    Ross Poole offers us a new and urgently needed analysis of the concept of identity, arguing that we are now in a position to envisage the end of nationalism. We see that the impact of issues like multiculturalism, republicanism, and indigenous rights have made it very difficult to see how the possibility of a postnational cosmopolitanism could not degenerate into a nihilistic moral universe.
    Nation and Identity will be a fascinating read for all those interested in issues of national identity, both politically and philosophically.

    Introduction; Chapter 1 The coming of nationalism; Chapter 2 National and other identities; Chapter 3 Three concepts of freedom; Chapter 4 Multiculturalism, Aboriginal rights and the nation; Chapter 5 The end of the affair?;

    Biography

    Ross Poole is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Macquarie University, Australia. His previous book, Morality and Modernity (Routledge, 1991), was selected by Choice as an outstanding philosophy book in 1991.