University of Nevada Press

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ISBN: 978-0-87417-238-6
Binding: [Hardcover]
Pages: 248
Publication date: 1994
$32.95
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Decline of the Nation-State
Description
This scholarly work explains the historical and contemporary causes that have given rise to the current explosion of nationalist movements in western Europe. The text also discusses the course these movements may take in the future. The current world political order, maintained by the separation of and frequent antagonism between sovereign nation-states, is increasingly inadequate given the profound social, economic, and technological transformations which have occurred in recent years. The nation-state is no longer the axis of political systems. Existing nation-states are currently undergoing a process similar to the one that caused the disappearance of traditional social forms and territorial entities which were subsumed into broader political structures. The goal of contemporary nationalist movements to create their own nation-states may therefore constitute an anachronistic aspiration and historical error. This crisis of the nation-state, as a form of universal juridico-political organization, and its replacement by supranational structures, is fraught with its own dangers. The latter purports to construct a supranational Europe. However, this new Europe cannot be established in opposition to the nations and regions; rather, it must form a kind of consensual melting pot resulting from the mixture of the complex social and cultural traditions of the different communities constituting European society. Decline of the Nation-State was translated into English by William A. Douglass. It was published originally as Contra el estado-nación: En orno al hecho y la cuestion naciónal in 1986.
Reviews
“This volume by Gurutz Bereciartu is a work that ought to be read and needs to be carefully reread. It reflects sound—at times untrod—scholarship, and it deals with a pertinent issue, inviting questions about the crisis of the modern nation-state.” —Joerge Dyrkton, Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism XXIV, 1997
Contents
Contents
Translator's Note
Preface
Introduction to the English Edition

Part One: Nation and the Bourgeois Revolution
One Building of the Modern Nation and State: A Conflictive Process
Two The Doctrinal Genesis of the Modern Nation
Three Nation, Nation-State, and Nationalism

Part Two: Nation and the Working Class
Four The National Question in Marx and Engels and in the Second International
Five Nation and Nation-State in Marxism-Leninism

Part Three: Nation and Technological Society
Six Contemporary Society and Its Crisis
Seven The Reconstruction of the Nation within the Context of the Transformation of Society
Eight Juridico-Political Restructuring of the Nations

Notes
Bibliography
Index