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E-raamat: Imagining Communities: Historical Reflections on the Process of Community Formation

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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Heritage and Memory Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040794364
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Heritage and Memory Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040794364

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In his groundbreaking Imagined Communities, first published in 1983, Benedict Anderson argued that members of a community experience a “deep, horizontal camaraderie.” Despite being strangers, members feel connected in a web of imagined experiences.
Yet while Anderson’s insights have been hugely influential, they remain abstract: it is difficult to imagine imagined communities. How do they evolve and how is membership constructed cognitively, socially and culturally? How do individuals and communities contribute to group formation through the act of imagining? And what is the glue that holds communities together?
Imagining Communities examines actual processes of experiencing the imagined community, exploring its emotive force in a number of case studies. Communal bonding is analyzed, offering concrete insights on where and by whom the nation (or social group) is imagined and the role of individuals therein. Offering eleven empirical case studies, ranging from the premodern to the modern age, this volume looks at and beyond the nation and includes regional as well as transnational communities as well.
 
Introduction 7(14)
Gemma Blok
Vincent Kuitenbrouwer
Claire Weeda
1 Meanwhile in Messianic Time
21(20)
Imagining the Medieval Nation in Time and Space and English Drinking Rituals
Claire Weeda
2 Diverse Origins and Shared Circumstances
41(18)
European Settler Identity Formation in the Seventeenth-Century Plantation Colony of Suriname
Suze Zijlstra
3 Imagining Europe
59(18)
The Peace of Ryswick (1697) and the Rise of European Consciousness
Lotte Jensen
4 Gypsy Music and the Fashioning of the National Community
77(20)
Krisztina Lajosi
5 `Tired, Worried and Overworked'
97(16)
An International Imagined Community of Nervous Sufferers in Medical Advertisements, 1900-1920
Gemma Blok
6 `From Heart to Heart'
113(18)
Colonial Radio and the Dutch Imagined Community in the 1920s
Vincent Kuitenbrouwer
7 Indonesian Nationalism in the Netherlands, 1920s-1930s
131(18)
Long-Distance Internationalism of Elite Pilgrims in Homogeneous, Empty Time
Klaas Stutje
8 Time, Rhythm and Ritual
149(24)
Imagined Communities in L'espoir (1937) and Les sept couleurs (1939)
Marleen Rensen
9 Stamverwantschap and the Imagination of a White, Transnational Community
173(24)
The 1952 Celebrations of the Jan van Riebeeck Tercentenary in the Netherlands and South Africa
Barbara Henkes
10 `L'Oranie Cycliste, une grande famille'
197(18)
Recycling Identities and the Pieds-Noirs Communitas, 1976-2016
Niek Pas
11 Remembering and Imagining the National Past
215(16)
Public Service Television Drama and the Construction of a Flemish Nation, 1953-1989
Alexander Dhoest
Index 231
Gemma Blok is a professor in the History of Mental Health and Culture at the Open University of the Netherlands. Her areas of expertise are the histories of psychiatry, addiction treatment, and drug use. She was a principal investigator in the HERA-funded project Governing the Narcotic City. Imaginaries, Practices and Discourses of Public Drug Cultures in European Cities from 1970 until Today. Vincent Kuitenbrouwer is assistant professor at the History Department of the University of Amsterdam. He is specialized in the history of modern imperialism with a particular focus on colonial media. Claire Weeda works as an assistant professor at the History Department of Leiden University. She is specialized in ethnic identity, medicine, and community formation in the period 1100-1500.