It’s Nation Time
A Progressive Defence
- Publisher
- McGill-Queen's University Press
- Initial publish date
- Oct 2024
- Category
- Nationalism
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9780228023432
- Publish Date
- Oct 2024
- List Price
- $39.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Speaking at the Congress of African People in September 1970, Amiri Baraka said, “In Newark, when we greet each other on the streets, we say, ‘what time is it?’ We always say, ‘It’s nation time!’ Nationalism is about land and nation, a way of life trying to free itself.” National identity and nationhood are too often easily dismissed as retrograde populism or racist exclusion. Instead, they need to be understood as a key part of a vision of globalization that holds the imperatives of diversity and solidarity in a delicate balance.
Jerry White offers a defence of the nation based on the assumption that struggles for national identity have often unfolded in ways that should be familiar to those who defend the political standpoint of the progressive left. Having evolved into something that a wide variety of actors have sought to defend, nations can also serve as a defence against the homogenizing forces of globalization and as havens of diversity in opposition to more singularly minded forms of affiliation. It’s Nation Time is structured as a series of specific case studies that speak to theories of nation and their historical and cultural manifestations. It includes examples as varied as Black nationalism, Simone Weil’s hopes for a postwar France, the first independence period of Georgia, the Bollywood cinema of Nehru-era India, and small or stateless nations such as New Zealand, Quebec, Ireland, Catalonia, the Métis, the Mohawk, and the Inuit to argue that nationalism is a social form that has much potential and life in it.
Broadly internationalist but also deeply insightful about the particular cultures and politics of small nations, It’s Nation Time defends an idea of nation, and a form of nationalism that are rooted in the potential for diversity, flexibility, and progressive politics.
About the author
Jerry White is an associate professor of film studies at the University of Alberta and a member of the education staff of the Telluride Film Festival. He is co-editor of North of Everything: English-Canadian Cinema since 1980 (2002), editor of The Cinema of Canada (2006), and author of Of This Place and Elsewhere: The Films and Photography of Peter Mettler (2006). He is the former editor of the Canadian Journal of Irish Studies.
Editorial Reviews
“In this rich, nourishing, and nuanced work, Jerry White takes sides: his is a clear and renewed vision of the nation, one open to the world, protective of diversity, structured around culture, and cultivating belonging and solidarity. Among this vision’s many merits is its articulation of Indigenous – Inuit, Métis, Mohawk – understandings of nation and community as models of what nations could and should become. This is a book that deals with major, complex issues with ease and astounding erudition, written in prose that rewards the attention of its readers.” Gérard Bouchard, author of The Making of the Nations and Cultures of the New World: An Essay in Comparative History