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Imagined Communities
Bennedict Anderson
1983. London: Verso.
Introduction
Perhaps without being much noticed yet, a fundamental
transformation in the history of Marxism and Marxist
movements is upon us. Its most visible signs are the recent
wars between Vietnam, Cambodia and China. These wars are of
world-historical importance because they are the first to
occur between regimes whose independence and revolutionary
credentials are undeniable, and because none of the
belligerents has made more than the most perfunctory
attempts to justify the bloodshed in terms of a recognizable
Marxist theoretical perspective. While it was still
just possible to interpret the Sino-Soviet border clashes of
1969, and the Soviet military interventions in Germany
(1953), Hungary (1956), Czechoslovakia (1968), and
Afghanistan (1980) in terms of- according to taste - 'social
imperialism,' 'defending socialism,' etc., no one, I
imagine, seriously believes that such vocabularies have much
bearing on what has occurred in Indochina.
If the Vietnamese invasion and occupation of Cambodia in
December 1978 and January 1979 represented the first
large-scale conventional war waged by one
revolutionary Marxist regime against another,1 China's
assault on Vietnam in February rapidly confirmed [End of
page 1] the precedent. Only the most trusting would dare
wager that in the declining years of this century any
significant outbreak of inter-state hostilities will
necessarily find the USSR and the PRC -let alone the smaller
socialist states- supporting, or fighting on the same side.
Who can be confident that Yugoslavia and Albania will not
one day come to blows ? Those variegated groups who seek a
withdrawal of the Red Army from its encampments in Eastern
Europe should remind themselves of the degree to which its
overwhelming presence has, since 1945, ruled out armed
conflict between the region 's Marxist regimes.
Such considerations serve to underline the fact that
since World War II every successful revolution has defined
itself in national terms--the People 's Republic of
China, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, and so forth--and,
in so doing, has grounded itself firmly in a territorial and
social space inherited from the pre-revolutionary past.
Conversely, the fact that the Soviet Union shares with the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland the
rare distinction of refusing nationality in its naming
suggests that it is as much the legatee of the pre-national
dynastic states of the nineteenth century as the precursor
of a twenty-first century internationalist order.2
Eric Hobsbawm is perfectly correct in stating that
'Marxist movements and states have tended to become national
not only in form but in substance, i.e., nationalist. There
is nothing to suggest [End of page 2] that this
trend will not continue.'3 Nor is the tendency confined to
the socialist world. Almost every year the United Nations
admits new members. And many 'old nations,' once thought
fully consolidated, find themselves challenged by
'sub'-nationalisms within their borders--nationalisms which,
naturally, dream of shedding this sub-ness one happy day.
The reality is quite plain: the 'end of the era of
nationalism, so long prophesied, is not remotely in sight.
Indeed, nation-ness is the most universally legitimate value
in the political life of our time.
But if the facts are clear, their explanation remains a
matter of long-standing dispute. Nation, nationality,
nationalism--all have proved notoriously difficult to
define, let alone to analyse. In contrast to the immense
influence that nationalism has exerted on the modem world,
plausible theory about it is conspicuously meagre. Hugh
Seton-Watson, author of far the best and most comprehensive
English-language text on nationalism, and heir to a vast
tradition of liberal historiography and social science,
sadly observes: 'Thus I am driven to the conclusion
that no "scientific definition" of the nation can be
devised; yet the phenomenon has existed and exists.'4 Tom
Nairn, author of the path-breaking The Break-up of
Britain, and heir to the scarcely less vast tradition
of Marxist historiography and social science, candidly
remarks: 'The theory of nationalism represents Marxism's
great historical failure.'5 But even this confession is
somewhat misleading, insofar as it can be taken to imply the
regrettable outcome of a long, self-conscious search for
theoretical clarity. It would be more exact to say that
nationalism has proved an uncomfortable anomaly for
Marxist theory and, precisely for that reason, has been
largely elided, rather than confronted. How else to explain
Marx's failure to explicate the crucial adjective in his
memorable formulation of 1848: 'The proletariat of each
country [End of page 3] must, of course, first of
all settle matters with its own bourgeoisie"?6 How
else to account for the use, for over a century, of the
concept 'national bourgeoisie' without any serious attempt
to justify theoretically the relevance of the adjective? Why
is this segmentation of the bourgeoisie - a
world-class insofar as it is defined in terms of the
relations of production- theoretically significant?
The aim of this book is to offer some tentative
suggestions for a more satisfactory interpretation of the
'anomaly' of nationalism. My sense is that on this topic
both Marxist and liberal theory have become etiolated in a
late Ptolemaic effort to 'save the phenomena'; and that a
reorientation of perspective int as it were, a Copernican
spirit is urgently required. My point of departure is that
nationality, or. as one might prefer to put it in view of
that word's multiple significations, nation-ness, as well as
nationalism, are cultural artefacts of a particular kind. To
understand them properly we need to consider carefully how
they have come into historical being, in what ways their
meanings have changed over time, and why. today. they
command such profound emotional legitimacy . I will be
trying to argue that the creation of these artefacts towards
the end of the eighteenth century' was the spontaneous
distillation of a complex 'crossing' of discrete historical
forces; but that, once created, they became 'modular'.
capable of being transplanted, with varying degrees of
self-consciousness, to a great variety of social terrains,
to merge and be merged with a correspondingly wide variety
of political and ideological constellations. I will also
attempt to show why these particular cultural artefacts have
aroused such deep attachments. [End of page 4]
CONCEPTS AND DEFINITIONS
Before addressing the questions raised above, it seems
advisable to consider briefly the concept of 'nation, and
offer a workable definition. Theorists of nationalism have
often been perplexed, not to say irritated, by these three
paradoxes: (1) The objective modernity of nations to the
historian's eye vs. their subjective antiquity in the eyes
of nationalists. (2) The formal universality of nationality
as a socio-cultural concept- in the modern world everyone
cant should, will 'have' a nationality, as he or she 'has' a
gender-vs. the irremediable particularity of its concrete
manifestations, such that, by definition, 'Greek'
nationality is sui generis. (3) The 'political' power of
nationalisms vs. their philosophical poverty and even
incoherence. In other words, unlike most other isms,
nationalism has never produced its own grand thinkers: no
Hobbeses, Tocquevilles, Marxes, or Webers. This 'emptiness'
easily gives rise, among cosmopolitan and polylingual
intellectuals, to a certain condescension. Like Gertrude
Stein in the face of Oakland, one can rather quickly
conclude that there is 'no there there'. It is
characteristic that even so sympathetic a student of
nationalism as Tom Nairn can nonetheless write that: '
"Nationalism", is the pathology of modern developmental
history, as inescapable as "neurosis " in the individual,
with much the same essential ambiguity attaching to it, a
similar built-in capacity for descent into dementia, rooted
in the dilemmas of helplessness thrust upon most of the
world (the equivalent of infantilism for societies) and
largely incurable. '8 Part of the difficulty is that one
tends unconsciously to hypostasize the existence of
Nationalism-with-a-big-N (rather as one might
Age-with-a-capital-A) and then to classify 'it' as an
ideology . (Note that if everyone has an age, Age is
merely an analytical expression. ) It would, I think, make
things easier if one treated it as if it belonged with
'kinship' and 'religion', rather than with 'liberalism'
or
'fascism '.
In an anthropological spirit, then, I propose the
following [End of page 5] definition of the nation:
it is an imagined political community-and imagined as both
inherently limited and sovereign.
It is imagined because the members of even the
smallest nation will never know most of their
fellow-members, meet them, or even hear of them, yet in the
minds of each lives the image of their communion.9 Renan
referred to this imagining in his suavely back-handed way
when he wrote that 'Or l'essence d'une nation est que tous
les individus aient beaucoup de choses en commun, et aussi
que tous aient oublie bien des choses.' [The essence of
a nation is that all the individuals have many things in
common, and also that they have all forgotten many
things.]10 With a certain ferocity Gellner makes a
comparable point when he rules that 'Nationalism is not the
awakening of nations to self-consciousness: it invents
nations where they do not exist.'11 The drawback to
this formulation, however, is that Gellner is so anxious to
show that nationalism masquerades under false pretences that
he assimilates 'invention' to 'fabrication , and 'falsity',
rather than to 'imagining' and 'creation '. In this way he
implies that 'true' communities exist which can be
advantageously juxtaposed to nations. In fact, all
communities larger than primordial villages of face-to-face
contact (and perhaps even these) are imagined. Communities
are to be distinguished, not by their falsity/genuineness,
but by the style in which they are imagined. Javanese
villagers have always known that they are connected to
people they have never seen, but these ties were once
imagined particularistically - as indefinitely stretchable
nets of kinship and clientship. Until quite recently, the
Javanese language had no word meaning the abstraction
'society.' We may today think of the French aristocracy of
the ancien regime as a class; but surely it was
imagined [End of page 6] this way only very late.12
To the question 'Who is the Comte de X?' the normal answer
would have been, not 'a member of the aristocracy, t but
'the lord of X', 'the uncle of the Baronne de Y, ' or 'a
client of the Duc de Z.'
The nation is imagined as limited because even
the largest of them, encompassing perhaps a billion living
human beings, has finite, if elastic, boundaries, beyond
which lie other nations. No nation imagines itself
coterminous with mankind. The most messianic nationalists do
not dream of a day when all the members of the human race
will join their nation in the way that it was possible, in
certain epochs, for, say, Christians to dream of a wholly
Christian planet.
It is imagined as sovereign because the concept
was born in an age in which Enlightenment and Revolution
were destroying the legitimacy of the divinely-ordained,
hierarchical dynastic realm. Coming to maturity at a stage
of human history when even the most devout adherents of any
universal religion were inescapably confronted with the
living pluralism of such religions, and the
allomorphism between each faith's ontological claims and
territorial stretch, nations dream of being free, and, if
under God, directly so. The gage and emblem of this freedom
is the sovereign state.
Finally, it is imagined as a community, because,
regardless of the actual inequality and exploitation that
may prevail in each, the nation is always conceived as a
deep, horizontal comradeship. Ultimately it is this
fraternity that makes it possible, over the past two
centuries, for so many millions of people, not so much to
kill, as willingly to die for such limited imaginings.
These deaths bring us abruptly face to face with the
central problem posed by nationalism: what makes the
shrunken imaginings of recent history (scarcely more than
two centuries) generate such colossal sacrifices ? I believe
that the beginnings of an answer lie in the cultural roots
of nationalism. [End of page 7]
Notes
1. This formulation is chosen simply to emphasize the
scale and the style of the fighting, not to assign blame. To
avoid possible misunderstanding, it should be said that the
December, 978 invasion grew out of armed clashes between
partisans of the two revolutionary movements going back
possibly as far as 1971. After April 1977, border raids,
initiated by the Cambodians, but quickly followed by the
Vietnamese, grew in size and scope, culminating in the major
Vietnamese incursion of December 1977. None of these raids,
however, aimed at overthrowing enemy regimes or occupying
large territories, nor were the numbers of troops involved
comparable to those deployed in December 1978. The
controversy over the causes of the war is most thoughtfully
pursued in: Stephen P. Heder, 'The Kampuchean- Vietnamese
Conflict, , in David W. P. Elliott, ed., The Third
Indochina Conflict, pp. 21-67; Anthony Bamett,
'Inter-Communist Conflicts and Vietnam, , Bulletin of
Concerned Asian Scholars, 11: 4 (October-December
1979), pp. 2-9; and Laura Summers, 'In Matters of War and
Socialism Anthony Bamett would Shame and Honour Kampuchea,
00 Much, , ibid. , pp. 10-18.
2. Anyone who has doubts about the UK's claims to such
parity with the USSR should ask himself what nationality its
name denotes: Great Brito-lrish?
3. Eric Hobsbawm, 'Some Reflections on "The Break-up of
Britain " " New Left Review, 105 (September-October
1977), p. 13.
4. See his Nations and States, p. 5. Emphasis
added.
5. See his 'The Modern Janus', New Left Review,
94 (November-December 1975), p. 3. This essay is
included unchanged in The Break-up of Britain as
chapter 9 (pp. 329-63).
6. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The Communist
Manifesto, in the Selected Works, I, p. 45.
Emphasis added. In any theoretical exegesis~ the words 'of
course' should flash red lights before the transported
reader .
7. As Aira Kemilainen notes, the twin 'founding fathers'
of academic scholarship on nationalism, Hans Kohn and
Carleton Hayes, argued persuasively for this dating. Their
conclusions have, I think, not been seriously disputed
except by nationalist ideologues in particular countries.
Kemilainen also observes that the word 'nationalism' did
not. come into wide general use until the end of the
nineteenth century. It did not occur, for example, in many
standard nineteenth century lexicons. If Adam Smith conjured
with the wealth of 'nations,' he meant by the term no more
than 'societies' or 'states.' Aira Kemilainen,
Nationalism, pp. 10, 33, and 48-49.
8. The Break-up of Britain, p. 359.
9. Cf. Seton-Watson, Nations and States, p. 5:
'All that I can find to say is that a nation exists when a
significant number of people in a community consider
themselves to form a nation, or behave as if they formed
one. ' We may translate 'consider themselves' as 'imagine
themselves.'
10. Ernest Renan, 'Qu 'est-ce qu'une nation?' in
Oeuvres Completes, 1, p. 892. He adds: 'tout
citoyen francais doit avoir oublie la Saint-Barthelemy, les
massacres du Midi an Xllle siecle. II n 'y a pas en France
dix familles qui puissent fournir la preuve d 'one origine
franque . . . '
11. Ernest Gelllner, Thought and Change, p. 169.
Emphasis added.
12. Hobsbawm, for example, 'fixes' it by saying that in
1789 it numbered about 400,000 in a population of
23,000,000. (See his The Age of Revolution", p.
78). But would . this statistical picture of the noblesse
have been imaginable under the ancien regime?
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