Social Theory of the Nation-State

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A01=Daniel Chernilo
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Author_Daniel Chernilo
Beck 2002b
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Civil Society
claim
classical sociological analysis
Common Language
comparative political sociology
Durkheim's Social Theory
Durkheim’s Social Theory
Emile Durkheim
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Generalised Symbolic Media
globalisation theory
Habermas 2001b
historical development of nation-states
Historical Elusiveness
Liberal Democratic Nation State
life
methodological
Methodological Cosmopolitanism
modern
Modern Social Life
Modern Social Relations
modernity critique
Nation State's Position
Nation State’s Position
nationalism
normative
Normative Ambiguity
position
Post-war
Previous Social Theory
Social Organisation
social systems theory
Social Theory
Social Theory's Claim
Social Theory’s Claim
Socio-political Arrangements
Sociopolitical Arrangement
states
theorys
universalism in social sciences
Violates
Weber 1970b

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415399142
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Jul 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A Social Theory of the Nation-State: the political forms of modernity beyond methodological nationalism, construes a novel and original social theory of the nation-state. It rejects nationalistic ways of thinking that take the nation-state for granted as much as globalist orthodoxy that speaks of its current and definitive decline.

Its main aim is therefore to provide a renovated account of the nation-state’s historical development and recent global challenges via an analysis of the writings of key social theorists. This reconstruction of the history of the nation-state into three periods:

  • classical (K. Marx, M. Weber, E. Durkheim)
  • modernist (T. Parsons, R. Aron, R. Bendix, B. Moore)
  • contemporary (M. Mann, E. Hobsbawm, U. Beck, M. Castells, N. Luhmann, J. Habermas)

For each phase, it introduces social theory’s key views about the nation-state, its past, present and future. In so doing this book rejects methodological nationalism, the claim that the nation-state is the necessary representation of the modern society, because it misrepresents the nation-state’s own problematic trajectory in modernity. And methodological nationalism is also rejected because it is unable to capture the richness of social theory’s intellectual canon. Instead, via a strong conception of society and a subtler notion of the nation-state, A Social Theory of the Nation-State tries to account for the ‘opacity of the nation-state in modernity’.

Daniel Chernilo is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University Alberto Hurtado in Chile and a Fellow of the Centre for Social Theory at the University of Warwick in England.

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