Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 440
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7425-4030-9 • Hardback • May 2006 • $170.00 • (£131.00)
978-0-7425-4031-6 • Paperback • April 2006 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
978-0-7425-7815-9 • eBook • May 2006 • $73.00 • (£56.00)
Joseph W. Esherick is professor of history and Hwei-Chih and Julia Hsiu Chair in Chinese Studies at the University of California, San Diego. Hasan Kayali is associate professor of history at the University of California, San Diego. Eric Van Young is professor of history at the University of California, San Diego.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part I: The Spanish Empire in the Americas
Chapter 3 The Limits of Atlantic-World Nationalism in a Revolutionary Age: Imagined Communities and Lived Communities in Mexico, 1810-1821
Chapter 4 The Great Transformation of Law and Legal Culture: "The Public" and "the Private" in the Transition from Empire to Nation in Mexico, Colombia, and Brazil, 1750-1850
Chapter 5 Selfhood and Nationhood in Latin America: From Colonial Subject to Democratic Citizen
Part 6 Part II: The Middle East and Eastern Europe
Chapter 7 Empires as Prisons of Nations versus Empires as Political Opportunity Structures: An Exploration of the Role of Nationalism in Imperial Dissolutions in Europe
Chapter 8 Changing Modalities of Empire: A Comparative Study of the Ottoman and Habsburg Decline
Chapter 9 Dreams of Empire, Dreams of Nations
Part 10 Part III: The Chinese Empire
Chapter 11 How the Qing Became China
Chapter 12 Going Imperial: Tibeto-Mongolian Buddhism and Nationalisms in China and Inner Asia
Part 13 Part IV: The Russian Empire and the Soviet Union
Chapter 14 The Long Road from Empire: Legacies of Nation-Building in the Soviet Successor States
Chapter 15 Setting the Political Agenda:Cultural Discourse in the Estonian Transition
Part 16 Afterword: The Return of Empire?
As this excellent collection shows, imperial collapses in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in Europe (including the dissolution of the Soviet Union), Latin America, the Middle East, and East Asia have often left conflict-ridden legacies. Anyone interested in the forces that have shaped much of the modern world, and in many of today's major foreign policy issues, should read this book.
— Daniel Chirot, University of Washington
As the sun appears to set on empire, the authors in this valuable collection explore how imperial realms were imagined and why nation-states ultimately succeeded them. Rather than being an inevitable process, the end of empire took a variety of forms in Latin America, the Middle East, and the Soviet Union. It still persists elsewhere and may have an unpredicted future. For students of nationalism and its opponents, this book is a must-read.
— Ronald Grigor Suny, William H. Sewell Jr. Distinguished University Professor of History and Political Science, University of Michigan
In a positive revisionist analysis of the formation, growth, structure, and decline of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century empires (Ottoman, Habsburg, Chinese, Spanish, and Russian-Soviet), the authors of this original book prove that various ethnic, religious, and political features of these empires survived in the nation states that replaced them. Empire to Nation offers new perspectives for understanding the political phenomena of empires, nation-states, and nationalism in the era of globalization.
— Kemal Karpat, University of Wisconsin
This unique collection of essays examines the transition from empire to nation-state in the Spanish, Ottoman, Habsburg, Chinese, and Russian empires. . . . Those seeking better resources for teaching world history will be highly pleased with this anthology. Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
This book gets at one of the most intriguing and debatable processes in modern world history, the collapse of what we now call multinational empires and their replacement by different, usually smaller and often more contentious, states. The examples are chosen with wide geographical range, and the resulting comparisons are fascinating.
— Peter Stearns, George Mason University, Professor, George Mason University