A Macat Analysis of Benedict Anderson's Imagined Communities

· Macat · Kimesimuliwa na Macat.com
Kitabu cha kusikiliza
Saa 2 dakika 9
Toleo kamili
Kimetimiza masharti
Ungependa sampuli isiyolipishwa ya Dakika 15? Sikiliza wakati wowote, hata ukiwa nje ya mtandao. 
Ongeza

Kuhusu kitabu hiki cha kusikiliza

Some people think nationhood is as old as civilization itself. But for anthropologist, historian, and political scientist Benedict Anderson, nation and nationalism are products of the communication technology of the era known as the modern age, which began in 1500. After the invention of the printing press in around 1440, common local languages gradually replaced Latin as the language of print. Ordinary people could now share ideas of their own. Later, they could access the important emerging ideas of the Enlightenment period of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The wider availability of maps, meanwhile, first broadened people’s ability to see themselves as part of something beyond their immediate locality—as part of “imagined communities,” or nations. In turn, these imagined communities then constructed the idea that there were “others” beyond their nation’s borders.

While most scholars believed that nationhood started in Europe, Anderson showed how, in fact, nationhood first emerged among European descendants in the Americas. The scope and perspective of Imagined Communities made a lasting impression in the field of nationalism studies.

Kadiria kitabu hiki cha kusikiliza

Tupe maoni yako.

Jinsi ya kupata kitabu cha kusikiliza

Simu mahiri na kompyuta vibao
Sakinisha programu ya Vitabu vya Google Play kwa ajili ya Android na iPad au iPhone. Itasawazishwa kiotomatiki kwenye akaunti yako na kukuruhusu usome vitabu mtandaoni au nje ya mtandao popote ulipo.
Kompyuta za kupakata na kompyuta
Unaweza kusoma vitabu vilivyonunuliwa kwenye Google Play kwa kutumia kivinjari wavuti cha kompyuta yako.

Zaidi kutoka kwa Jason Xidias

Vitabu sawia vya kusikiliza

Vilivyosimuliwa na Macat.com