Roundtable: Four Nations.

Shahmima Akhtar, Erika Hanna, Peter Hession, Mobeen Hussain, Krishan Kumar, Naomi Lloyd-Jones, Jane Ohlmeyer, Ian Stewart
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Abstract

Nations have long since preoccupied historians. Histories of how nations came to be, how they persisted, and how nations were unmade are innumerable. As a political unit of analysis, the nation has fascinated and divided. On the one hand, histories of the nation have traced the origins of particular nation states, analysing how a large body of people becomes united within a geographic territory through a shared language, a shared identity, and a shared culture. On the other hand, such histories have been criticized for reifying the nation-state, stressing the majority over the minority, and ultimately for obfuscating differences. The nation as a structure can indeed serve the needs of the ruling establishment to create a governing society. How then, can historians retain the nation as a unit of analysis without for example valorizing England in histories of the UK? Why is it so often that in histories of Britain, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales are mentioned as a comparable case and not the focus itself? Is it possible to ensure that histories of the British Isles reject and refuse implicit hierarchies that routinely prioritize one nation over other nations? Fundamentally, is it even worthwhile to study the nation instead of, for example, focusing on specific gendered groups, or ethnic communities or labour movements for instance? By focusing on thematic experiences rather than the nation-state can historians avoid inadvertently reproducing structural inequality in twenty-first-century Britain?

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圆桌会议:四国。
长期以来,国家一直是历史学家关注的问题。关于国家如何产生、如何延续以及如何被摧毁的历史不胜枚举。作为一个政治分析单位,国家既让人着迷,也让人分裂。一方面,民族史追溯了特定民族国家的起源,分析了一大批人如何通过共同的语言、共同的身份和共同的文化在一个地理区域内团结起来。另一方面,这些历史也被批评为民族国家的重构,强调多数而非少数,最终掩盖了差异。民族作为一种结构,确实可以满足统治机构创建一个治理社会的需要。那么,历史学家如何才能在保留民族作为分析单位的同时,不在英国历史中贬低英格兰呢?为什么在英国史中,爱尔兰、苏格兰和威尔士常常被作为可比案例而不是重点本身被提及?是否有可能确保不列颠群岛的历史摒弃和拒绝隐含的等级制度,这种等级制度通常将一个国家置于其他国家之上?从根本上说,是否值得研究民族,而不是关注特定的性别群体、种族社区或劳工运动等?通过关注专题经验而非民族国家,历史学家能否避免在 21 世纪的英国无意中再现结构性不平等?
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