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Dream Nation

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Against the backdrop of ever-increasing nationalist violence during the last decade of the twentieth century, this book challenges standard analyses of nation formation by elaborating on the nation...
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  • 14 September 2021
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Against the backdrop of ever-increasing nationalist violence during the last decade of the twentieth century, this book challenges standard analyses of nation formation by elaborating on the nation's dream-like hold over the modern social imagination. Stathis Gourgouris argues that the national fantasy lies at the core of the Enlightenment imaginary, embodying its central paradox: the intertwining of anthropological universality with the primacy of a cultural ideal.

Crucial to the operation of this paradox and fundamental in its ambiguity is the figure of Greece, the universal alibi and cultural predicate behind national-cultural consolidation throughout colonialist Europe. The largely unpredictable institution of a modern Greek nation in 1830 undoes the interweaving of Enlightenment and Philhellenism, whose centrifugal strands continue to unravel the certainty of European history, down to the internal predicaments of the European Union or the tragedy of the Balkan conflicts.

This 25th Anniversary edition of the book includes a new preface by the author in which he situates the book's original insights in retrospect against the newer developments in the social and political conditions of a now globalized world: the neocolonial resurgence of nationalism and racism, the failure of social democratic institutions, the crisis of sovereignty and citizenship, and the brutal conditions of stateless peoples.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 328
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 14 September 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503630635
Format: Paperback
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"[A] general audience, too, can benefit from Gourgouris's revisions of accepted theory, especially his questioning of the way in which the Greek Enlightenment created the first phase of a new national identity. Despite Gourgouris's claim that he merely raises questions instead of forging conclusions, readers will find that many conclusions are indeed offered, and furthermore that the Enlightenment is employed to reach both backwards and forwards in Greece's imaginative history in a way that might even suggest a postmodern sort of linearity."– Times Literary Supplement
Stathis Gourgouris is Professor of Comparative Literature and Society at Columbia University. He is the author of Does Literature Think? Literature as Theory for an Antimythical Era (Stanford, 2003); Lessons in Secular Criticism (2013); and The Perils of the One (2019), among other books.
Contents and Abstracts
1The Nation's Dream-Work
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2The Formal Imagination, I: The Back Roads of Developmentfrom Enlightenment to Bureaucracy
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3The Formal Imagination, II: Natural History and NationalPedagogy—The Case of Korais
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4The Punishment of Philhellenism
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5The Phantasms of Writing, I: Makriyiannis and the Miraclesof National Memory
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6The Phantasms of Writing, II: Nostalgia for Utopia—the Idolatries of Seferis
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7Homologia/Apologia: The Writing of National History
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