
Myth of the Month 25: Nations
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Aug 31, 2025 A lively lecture traces how medieval kingdoms, universities, and the print revolution made people imagine wide kinship groups united by language and ancestry. The rise of revolutionary mass mobilization and romantic thought reshaped loyalties into patriotic rituals. The spread of invented national histories, decolonization, and debates among scholars about whether nations are created or imagined are also explored.
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How Nationalist Histories Follow A Template
- Nationalist histories use a transferable resurrection narrative: ancient glory, foreign oppression, survival through folk culture, and modern rebirth.
- Sam Biagetti illustrates this with the 1869 Glasgow preface to McGee's A Popular History of Ireland praising Ireland as a "deathless race."
Premodern Social Webs Prevent National Imagination
- Pre-modern loyalties centered on face-to-face ties: family, village, manor, guilds, and local festivals, not on abstract nations.
- Sam contrasts city-state and tribal identities with later nation models, showing ethnicity and politics were separate.
Print Created The Linguistic Basis For Nations
- The printing press and vernacular print standardized languages, creating wider reading publics that made national-language communities plausible.
- Sam cites printers' shift from Latin to vernaculars (Tuscan, Castilian) and Luther's Bible as drivers of linguistic unity.










