- Anthony D. Smith
Infobox Person
name = Anthony D. Smith
caption =
image_size =
birth_date = birth year and age|1933
education =B.A. ,Oxford ;M.Sc. ,D.Phil. ,London School of Economics
occupation =Sociologist
title =Professor Emeritus
employer =London School of Economics Anthony D. Smith (born 1933) is
Professor Emeritus of Nationalism and Ethnicty at theLondon School of Economics , and is considered one of the founders of theinterdisciplinary field ofnationalism studies . His best-known contributions to the field are the distinction between 'civic' and 'ethnic' types of nations andnationalism , and the idea that all nations have dominant 'ethnic cores'. While Smith agrees with other authors that "nationalism" is a modern phenomenon, he insists that "nations" have pre-modern origins.Smith took his first degree in
Classics andPhilosophy inOxford , and his master's degree and doctorate inSociology at theLondon School of Economics . He is currently Professor of Ethnicity and Nationalism in the European Institute at theLondon School of Economics .He is a former student of the philosopher and
anthropologist Ernest Gellner , but did not share his view of nationalism in the long run. He created an approach of nationalism he calledethnosymbolism , which is a synthesis of modernist and traditional views on the subject.Smith argues that nationalism draws on the pre-existing history of the "group", an attempt to fashion this history into a sense of common identity and shared history. This is not to say that this history should academically valid or cogent - indeed, Smith asserts, many nationalisms are based on historically flawed interpretations of past events and tend to overly mythologise small, inaccurate parts of their history.
Nationalism, according to Smith, does not require that members of a "nation" should all be alike, only that they should feel an intense bond of
solidarity to the nation and other members of their nation. A sense of nationalism can inhabit and be produced from whateverdominant ideology exists in a given locale. Nationalism builds on pre-existingkinship , religious and belief systems. Smith describes theethnic groups that form the background of modern nations as "ethnie ".A
nation-state can according to Smith be defined as “a state claming to be a nation”, while a nation, can be defined as “a named population sharing an historic territory, common myths and historical memories, a masspublic culture , a common economy and common legal rights and duties for its members”. An ethnie is in turn defined as ”a named population sharing a collective proper name, a presumed common ancestry, shared historical memories, one or more differencing elements of common culture, an association with a specific ‘homeland ’ and a sense of solidarity for significant sectors of the population”. It should be noted that the boundaries of an ethnie can be quite recognisable even when not all of its characteristics appear at the same time. It is, in other words, not a question of a smallest common denominator.Fact|date=August 2008elected publications
*(1971) "Theories of Nationalism", ISBN 0-7156-0555-0; 2nd ed. (1983), ISBN 0-7156-0584-4
*(1987) "The Ethnic Origins of Nations", ISBN 0-631-15205-9
*(1991) "National Identity", ISBN 0-14-012565-5
*(1995) "Nations and Nationalism in a Global Era", ISBN 0-7456-1018-8
*(1998) "Nationalism and Modernism", ISBN 0-415-06340-X
*(2000) "The Nation in History", ISBN 0-7456-2580-0
*(2003) "Chosen Peoples: Sacred Sources of National Identity", ISBN 0-19-210017-3
*(2004) "The Antiquity of Nations", ISBN 0745627455
*(2008) "Cultural Foundations of Nations: Hierarchy, Covenant and Republic", ISBN 1405177985
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