Ciencias Políticas

Nations and national identity in urban Latin America: the case of Buenos Aires

Número
525
Autor
Fernando Lopez-Alves
Mes/Año
10/2013
Adjunto
Resumen

Literature has long argued that the nation is a community, either “imagined”, ”invented”, or of “sentiment”. The existence of such a “national community” has strongly relied upon the assumption that members share –or feel/believe that they share--   something/s in common. It stands to reason that members of the national community, therefore, should have some degree of consciousness as to what unites them as a nation. Theoretically, they ought to somewhat concur in identifying the features that characterize their nations and differentiates them from others. Very seldom, however, has literature asked members of the nation what the nation means to them.  This is precisely what I do in this paper, thereby questioning well-known arguments in current literature. First, I seek to establish to what degree, if any, the nation exists as a construct in the popular imaginary. Second, I attempt to identify the concepts and images that members of the nation associate with their being Argentinean, Uruguayan, or Spaniard, etc. Third, I detect the associations that members of the nation make between themselves as individuals and their national identity.