1st Edition

National Myths Constructed Pasts, Contested Presents

Edited By Gérard Bouchard Copyright 2013
    320 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    320 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    National myths are now seriously questioned in a number of societies. In the West, for instance, a number of factors have combined to destabilise the symbolic foundation of nations and collective identities. As a result, the diagnosis of a deep cultural crisis has become commonplace. Indeed, who today has not heard about the erosion of common values or the undermining of social cohesion? But to efficiently address this issue, do we know enough about the nature and role of myths in modern and postmodern societies?

    Against this background, National Myths: Constructed Pasts, Contested Presents relies on a sample of nations from around the world and seeks to highlight the functioning of national myths, both as representations that make sense of a collectivity, and as socially grounded tools used in a web of power relations. The collection draws together contributions from international experts to examine the present state of national myths, and their fate in today’s rapidly-changing society. Can – or must – nations do without the sort of overarching symbolic configurations that national myths provide? If so, how to rethink the fabrics and the future of our societies?

    This book will appeal to students and scholars interested in sociology, national, identity and memory studies, myths, shared beliefs, or collective imaginaries.

     Acknowledgments.  List of Contributors.  Introduction by Gérard Bouchard  1. The Small Nation With a Big Dream: Québec National Myths (eighteenth–twentieth centuries) by Gérard Bouchard  2. National Imaginaries in a Globalizing Age: The Case of English Canada by Allan Smith  3. The Myth(s) that Will Not Die: American National Exceptionalism by Ian Tyrrell  4. Ethnic Myths as National Identity in Brazil by Jeffrey Lesser  5. Understanding Mexico’s Master Myth: A Case for Theory by Fernando Castaños  6. 1066 and All That: Myths of the English by Krishan Kumar  7. Polish Mythology and the Traps of Messianic Martyrology by Geneviève Zubrzycki  8. Myths and National Identity Choices in Post-Communist Russia by Yitzhak M. Brudny  9. Myth and the Postnational Polity: The Case of the European Union by Vincent Della Sala  10. Transforming Myths, Contested Narratives: The Reshaping of Mnemonic Traditions in Israeli Culture by Yael Zerubavel  11. War Room Stories and the Rainbow Nation: Competing Narratives in Contemporary South African Literature by Monica Popescu  12. Gender, Nehanda, and the Myth of Nationhood in the Making of Zimbabwe by Ruramisai Charumbira  13. War, Myths, and National Identity Formation: Chinese Attitudes toward Japan by Yinan He  14. Lineages and Lessons (for national myth formation) of Japan’s Postwar National Myths by Stephen Vlastos  15. Myths of the Nation, Cultural Recognition, and Personal Law in India by Narendra Subramanian  16. National Myths: An Overview by Gérard Bouchard

    Biography

    Gérard Bouchard is a Member of the Royal Society of Canada and the Académie des lettres du Québec. He is Professor at the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi. Trained in sociology and history, he has spent over twenty years conducting empirical, multidisciplinary research in various fields of the social and historical sciences. At the same time, he has headed the BALSAC Project, a computerized population register covering the whole population of Quebec up to the 1960s. He is now doing comparative research on social myths and collective imaginaries, for a Canada Research Chair. He has been awarded a number of prestigious distinctions, including the French Légion d’Honneur.