Citizenship and Nationhood in France and GermanyHarvard University Press, 30 de jun. de 2009 - 284 páginas The difference between French and German definitions of citizenship is instructive--and, for immigrants from North Africa, Turkey, and Eastern Europe, decisive. Brubaker shows how this difference--between the territorial basis of the French citizenry and German emphasis on blood descent--was shaped by sharply differing understandings of nationhood. |
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Página 3
... German understandings of nationhood have remained surprisingly robust . No ... German immigrants from Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union , but remarkably ... Empire the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation , as it came to be called ...
... German understandings of nationhood have remained surprisingly robust . No ... German immigrants from Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union , but remarkably ... Empire the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation , as it came to be called ...
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Rogers BRUBAKER. institutional incubator of German national consciousness, analogous in this respect to the Capetian monarchy in France. But while nation and kingdom were conceptually fused in France, nation and supranational Empire were ...
Rogers BRUBAKER. institutional incubator of German national consciousness, analogous in this respect to the Capetian monarchy in France. But while nation and kingdom were conceptually fused in France, nation and supranational Empire were ...
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... Germany coinciding neither with the supranational preten- sions of the Empire nor with the subnational reach of effective political authority. It was much more diffi cult to distinguish nation and state, and therefore to imagine a ...
... Germany coinciding neither with the supranational preten- sions of the Empire nor with the subnational reach of effective political authority. It was much more diffi cult to distinguish nation and state, and therefore to imagine a ...
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... Empire and more and more frequently as an apolitical , ethnocultural entity — an “ inward Empire , ” as Schiller put it in 1801 , when the old Empire had entered its fi nal phase of disintegration , or a Kulturnation , in the later ...
... Empire and more and more frequently as an apolitical , ethnocultural entity — an “ inward Empire , ” as Schiller put it in 1801 , when the old Empire had entered its fi nal phase of disintegration , or a Kulturnation , in the later ...
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... empire.38 Ideologically and institutionally , this overseas imperialism was heir to the continental imperialism of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic periods and , more remotely , to the Roman imperial tradition . Ideologi- cally it was ...
... empire.38 Ideologically and institutionally , this overseas imperialism was heir to the continental imperialism of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic periods and , more remotely , to the Roman imperial tradition . Ideologi- cally it was ...
Conteúdo
1 | |
I THE INSTITUTION OF CITIZENSHIP | 19 |
THE BOUNDS OF BELONGING | 73 |
Conclusion | 179 |
Notes | 191 |
Bibliography | 245 |
Index | 267 |
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Termos e frases comuns
administrative affi Algerian Alsace-Lorraine ancien régime Article 23 assimilation assimilationist attribution of citizenship Auslandsdeutsche automatically become French birth born in France cation century citizenry citizenship status civic incorporation closure codifi cation cultural debate defi nition demographic descent droit dual citizenship ethnic Germans ethnocultural ethnonational étrangers Europe exclusion formal français France and Germany French citizens French citizenship French citizenship law French nationality French Revolution German Empire Grawert Ibid immi inclusive infl institution interest Jews jus sanguinis jus soli legislative membership migration military service modern nation-state national citizenship national self-understanding nationalist Nationalstaat nition of citizenship noncitizens offi percent persons born Polenpolitik Poles Polish politics of citizenship population principle privileged proposal Prussian Prussian east refl ects Reich Reichstag Republican residence restrictive Revolution second-generation immigrants signifi cant social Soviet Union Staat und Staatsangehörigkeit state-membership state-national territory third-generation immigrants tion tradition understanding of nationhood Volksdeutsche voluntarist