In the early 1990s Italy faced the collapse of the established political parties and the increasing prominence of the secessionist Northern League had public commentators debating whether Italy, after 130 years as a unified state, constituted a nation at all. But Italy remained intact into the next century as is its own unique national creation. This new study examines this phenomenon and offers a detailed discussion of Italy's historical development. It argues that the exigencies of state-formation were more important in the founding of the Kingdom of Italy than nationalism, and then argues that early failures to engineer an Italian national consciousness were due to the state's refusal to integrate local cultures into a consolidated national culture. Rather, a nation was gradually developed from within society, through the construction of a public sphere, through mass communications, migration movements, and mass consumerism. Nicholas Doumanis is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of New South Wales, Australia In the early 1990s Italy faced the collapse of the established political parties and the increasing prominence of the secessionist Northern League had public commentators debating whether Italy, after 130 years as a unified state, constituted a nation at all. But Italy remained intact into the next century as is its own unique national creation. This new study examines this phenomenon and offers a detailed discussion of Italy's historical development.
It argues that the exigencies of state-formation were more important in the founding of the Kingdom of Italy than nationalism, and then argues that early failures to engineer an Italian national consciousness were due to the state's refusal to integrate local cultures into a consolidated national culture. Rather, a nation was gradually developed from within society, through the construction of a public sphere, through mass communications, migration movements, and mass consumerism. "Doumanis succeeds in weaving considerable narrative detail into what is essentially a synthesis-and endorsement-of recent revisionist literature on modern Italian history.Deserves to enhance the author's growing scholarly reputationHistory "Doumanis succeeds in weaving considerable narrative detail into what is essentially a synthesis-and endorsement-of recent revisionist literature on modern Italian history.Deserves to enhance the author's growing scholarly reputationHistory "Although the book aims mainly at an undergraduate readership, it provides for a comprehensive and yet concise account of the process to nation and nation-state formation in Italy with a significant level of historical detail, useful for the graduate readership and the interested scholar. The level of historical detail does not obscure the main line of argument, which is to elucidate the particular path of Italy to nation formation as well as to suggest how nations and national identities are 'historical, mutable and contestable' and 'constantly in the making'. Doumanis casts light on the different societal, political, economic and cultural factors that combined, often in opposition to one another, in the formation of modern nations and nation-states in 19th and 20th century Europe, contesting earlier views on the historical inevitability of nations. This book offers a clear, concise, well-structured and critical account of the Italian path to nation formation that can serve as an important case-study reading to students of nationalism as well as a starting point for further research for students and scholars interested in the Italian case in particular.
"Nations and Nationalism.