Lexington Books
Pages: 232
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-4194-6 • Hardback • December 2010 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-0-7391-4195-3 • Paperback • February 2017 • $52.99 • (£41.00)
978-1-4616-3341-9 • eBook • December 2010 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Robert A. Saunders is assistant professor in the Department of History, Economics, and Politics at the Farmingdale State College, SUNY.
1 Acknowledgements
2 Introduction: Turning the Tables on Procrustes
Part 3 Part I: The Color and Shape of a Cyberspatial World
Chapter 4 Chapter 1: From Bibles to Bollywood: Mass Media, Identity, and the State
Chapter 5 Chapter 2: Media Unbound: The Internet, Cyberspace, and Nationalism on the Web
Chapter 6 Chapter 3: New World (Dis)Orders: National Identity and Ethnic Poli-tics in the Global Era
Part 7 Part II: Homo-Cybericus-Genus & Species
Chapter 8 Chapter 4: Electronic Irredentists: Albanians Seeking Unity in Digital Space and Virtual Places
Chapter 9 Chapter 5: Post-Imperial Digerati: Near Abroad Russians Transcending Local Barriers via Global Technologies
Chapter 10 Chapter 6: Cybernetic Vanguard: The Roma's Use of the Web to Protect a Minority under Siege
Chapter 11 Chapter 7: Virtual Prophets: Ummahists and the Construction of a New Imagined Community
12 Afterword: Towards a Cybernational Future?
13 Bibliography
14 About the Author
Intriguing, topical, balanced, and well-supported by empirical information, Ethnopolitics in Cyberspace will likely become an important book on the contemporary evolution of nationalism.
— Karim H.Karim, Carleton University in Ottawa
Clear and comprehensive, essential reading for students and scholars alike, an authoritative analysis of nationalism and nationality in the era of the Internet, Ethnopolitics in Cyberspace fills a critical gap in our hitherto anecdotal understanding of the use of the Web by cyber-elites and peoples without countries. Too sophisticated a scholar to merely celebrate the new ecumene of cyberspace, Saunders shows that the Internet is not neutral but a double-edged sword. He analyzes how subaltern nations, national minorities, immigrant diasporas, and other groups without real-world territories are able to bridge borders, oceans, and time electronically to pursue their identity projects.
— Wolf Schäfer, Stony Brook Institute for Global Studies, and Globality Studies Journal
Drawing on a variety of disciplines in innovative and exciting ways, Robert A. Saunders has produced a delightfully written and provocatively argued book that will challenge many views of how national identity is produced and reproduced in today's world.
— Alexander J. Motyl, Rutgers University-Newark