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Poslední úprava: doc. PhDr. Zdeněk Uherek, CSc. (05.02.2024)
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Poslední úprava: doc. PhDr. Zdeněk Uherek, CSc. (05.02.2024)
Students will attend lectures and seminars, discuss lectured topics and literature, and write and discuss a study on at least five pages (9,000 characters). The small study will include a brief introduction, a subchapter on the status and methodology, a presentation of results and conclusions, and a list of references. If possible, this small study will be discussed in a seminar. Discussion of the topic in seminar max 20 points. Small study max 80 points. Text is assessed from the following points of view:
Classification of students for fulfilled duties is as follows: Evaluation criteria: 50 - 0: F (failed) |
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Poslední úprava: doc. PhDr. Zdeněk Uherek, CSc. (06.11.2023)
Compulsory: Anderson, B. (2016). Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. London: Verso. Brubaker, R. (2011). Religion and nationalism: Four approaches *. Nations and Nationalism, 18 (1), 2-20. doi: 10.1111 / j.1469-8129.2011.00486. Gellner, E. (1983). Nations and Nationalism . Ithaca, NY: Cornell Univ. Press. Haas, E.B. (2018). Nationalism, Liberalism, and Progress. Cornell University Press. Holy, L. (nd). (1996). Nation against state. The Little Czech and the Great Czech Nation, 16-54. doi: 10.1017 / cbo9780511621727.002 Uherek, Z. (2022). From Interdependence to Disjunction: Gellner’s Theory and the Development of the Interrelationship Between the Concepts of Nation and Nationalism. In: Petr Skalník (ed.), Ernest Gellner´s Legacy and Social Theory Today. Cham: Palgrave MacMillan: 501–519.
Recommended: Beyer, P. (2019). Globalization and Glocalization. The Sage Handbook of Sociology of Religion, 98-118. doi: 10.4135 / 9781848607965.n6 DeHanas, D. N. & Shterin, M. (2018) Religion and the rise of populism. Religion, State & Society, 46:3, 177-185, DOI: 10.1080/09637494.2018.1502911 Eriksen, TH (2006). Nations in Cyberspace . Lecture presented by Ernest Gellner Lecture, London School of Economics, London. Fortes, M. & Evans-Pritchard, EE 1940. Introduction. In: M. Fortes & EE Evans-Pritchard (eds) African Political Systems. London: Oxford University Press: 1-23. Freedman, M., & Barth, F. (1970). Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: Difference. The British Journal of Sociology, 21 (2), 231. doi: 10.2307 / 588416 Giddens, A. (1991). The consequences of modernity . Cambridge: Polity Press: 63-78 Meinhof, UH (2018). Living (with) borders: East-West borders in Europe . Abingdon, Oxfordshire: Routledge. Uherek , Z . (2017) Not only moving bodies : conceived and transforming concepts in migration studies. Slovak Ethnography: 222-233 Wariavwalla, B. (2000) Religion and Nationalism in India Ram The Hindu Nation, 89: 357, 593-605, DOI: 10.1080 / 003585300225223 Wimmer, A. & Schiller, NG (2003). Methodological Nationalism, Social Sciences, and Study of Migration: An Essay in Historical Epistemology. International Migration Review, 37 (3), 576-610. doi: 10.1111 / j.1747-7379.2003.tb00151. |
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Poslední úprava: doc. PhDr. Zdeněk Uherek, CSc. (05.02.2024)
Theories and Concepts I. Theories, basic concepts and ideas of nationalism 1. Basic introduction to nationalism 2. Theory of cultural and ethnic groups: primordialists, modernists, Ernest Gellner's and Benedict Anderson's theories. 3. Typologies of nationalism. 4. Nationalism and economy 5. Ethnosymbolism and poetics of 19th-century nationalism 6. Transformations of nationalism during the Cold War 7. Nationalism revised - nationalism and post-modernity, transnationalism, methodological nationalism Case studies 8. Long-distance nationalism, migration, expats, compatriots 9. Anthropology of hope - Polish example, 10. Bosnian example; nationalism and sports 11. Nationalism and people without the state Romani example; Nationalism outside Europe, Indonesia and New Zealand case 12. Nationalism and tourism
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