
Transnational Patriotism In The Mediterranean Investigates The Long Process Of Transition From A World Of Empires To A World Of Nation-states By Narrating The Biographies Of A Group Of People Who Were Born Within Empires But Came Of Age Surrounded By The Emerging Vocabulary Of Nationalism, Much Of Which They Themselves Created. It Is The Story Of A Generation Of Intellectuals And Political Thinkers From The Ionian Islands Who Experienced The Collapse Of The Republic Of Venice And The Dissolution Of The Common Cultural And Political Space Of The Adriatic, And Who Contributed To The Creation Of Italian And Greek Nationalisms. By Uncovering This Forgotten Intellectual Universe, Transnational Patriotism In The Mediterranean Retrieves A World Characterized By Multiple Cultural, Intellectual, And Political Affiliations That Have Since Been Buried By The Conventional Narrative Of The Formation Of Nation-states. Transnational Patriotism In The Mediterranean Rethinks The Origins Of Italian And Greek Nationalisms And States, Highlighting The Intellectual Connection Between The Italian Peninsula, Greece, And Russia, And Reestablishing The Lost Link Between The Changing Geopolitical Contexts Of Western Europe, The Mediterranean, And The Balkans In The Age Of Revolutions. It Re-inscribes Important Intellectuals And Political Figures, Considered 'national Fathers' Of Italy And Greece (such As Ugo Foscolo, Dionysios Solomos, Ioannis Kapodistrias And Niccolò Tommaseo), Into Their Regional And Multicultural Context, And Shows How Nations Emerged From An Intermingling, Rather Than A Clash, Of Ideas Concerning Empire And Liberalism, Enlightenment And Religion, Revolution And Conservatism, And East And West.
This work investigates how the transition from imperial structures to nation-states was shaped by a specific generation of intellectuals who navigated multiple cultural and political identities. Prof. Konstantina Zanou, an expert in Mediterranean history, utilizes biographical data and political correspondence to argue that Italian and Greek nationalisms emerged from an intermingling of ideas rather than a simple clash of civilizations. By focusing on figures from the Ionian Islands, the author demonstrates how these individuals bridged the gap between the collapsing Venetian Republic and the rise of modern European states.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of transnational intellectual history and the origins of modern nationalism. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's success in re-contextualizing figures often claimed exclusively by single national narratives.
Page Count:
224
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191093033
ISBN-13:
9780191093036
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