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Imagined Noncommunities: National Indifference as a Category of Analysis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
Abstract
Since the birth of mass political movements, European nationalists have lamented the failure of their constituents to respond to the siren song of national awakening. This article explores the potential of national indifference as a category of analysis in the history of modern central and eastern Europe. Tara Zahra defines indifference, explores how forms of national indifference changed over time, probes the methodological challenges associated with historicizing indifference, and examines the intersections between national indifference and transnational history. Making indifference visible enables historians to better understand the limits of nationalization and thereby helps to challenge the nationalist narratives and categories that have traditionally dominated the historiography of eastern Europe.
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References
I thank Pieterjudson, Jeremy King, the participants at the 2008 Conference “Sites of Indifference to Nation in Habsburg Central Europe” at the University of Alberta, and the anonymous referees for Slavic Review for their helpful feedback on earlier drafts of this essay.
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