sland societies and mainland nation-building in the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Corsica in Italian, French, and Catalan nationalism

In the history of Modern Europe, islands have generally been considered as passive spaces. Historically, however, Mediterranean island societies have played important—and often active—roles in the formation of nation-states and in nation-building processes. Little attention has been paid to the wa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marcel A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Prince Edward Island 2017-05-01
Series:Island Studies Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.islandstudies.ca/sites/default/files/ISJFarinelliIslandMainlandNationalism.pdf
id doaj-8be2d48d67994069a795ae21118aec7c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8be2d48d67994069a795ae21118aec7c2020-11-25T03:49:51ZengUniversity of Prince Edward IslandIsland Studies Journal1715-25932017-05-01121213410.24043/isj.3 sland societies and mainland nation-building in the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Corsica in Italian, French, and Catalan nationalismMarcel A.0Farinelli In the history of Modern Europe, islands have generally been considered as passive spaces. Historically, however, Mediterranean island societies have played important—and often active—roles in the formation of nation-states and in nation-building processes. Little attention has been paid to the ways in which island societies have affected mainland nationalism. This article argues that Mediterranean islands offered rhetorical and symbolic elements that proved useful for the construction of mainland European national identities, largely because islandness, from a continental perspective, was seen as capable of conserving authenticity. This article draws upon the Mediterranean island case studies of Sardinia and Corsica and their relationships to Catalan nationalism, French nationalism, and Italian nationalism as well as wider nation-building processes.http://www.islandstudies.ca/sites/default/files/ISJFarinelliIslandMainlandNationalism.pdfCatalan nationalismCorsicaFrench nationalismislandsItalian nationalismnation-buildingMediterranean StudiesSardinia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcel A.
spellingShingle Marcel A.
sland societies and mainland nation-building in the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Corsica in Italian, French, and Catalan nationalism
Island Studies Journal
Catalan nationalism
Corsica
French nationalism
islands
Italian nationalism
nation-building
Mediterranean Studies
Sardinia
author_facet Marcel A.
author_sort Marcel A.
title sland societies and mainland nation-building in the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Corsica in Italian, French, and Catalan nationalism
title_short sland societies and mainland nation-building in the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Corsica in Italian, French, and Catalan nationalism
title_full sland societies and mainland nation-building in the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Corsica in Italian, French, and Catalan nationalism
title_fullStr sland societies and mainland nation-building in the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Corsica in Italian, French, and Catalan nationalism
title_full_unstemmed sland societies and mainland nation-building in the Mediterranean: Sardinia and Corsica in Italian, French, and Catalan nationalism
title_sort sland societies and mainland nation-building in the mediterranean: sardinia and corsica in italian, french, and catalan nationalism
publisher University of Prince Edward Island
series Island Studies Journal
issn 1715-2593
publishDate 2017-05-01
description In the history of Modern Europe, islands have generally been considered as passive spaces. Historically, however, Mediterranean island societies have played important—and often active—roles in the formation of nation-states and in nation-building processes. Little attention has been paid to the ways in which island societies have affected mainland nationalism. This article argues that Mediterranean islands offered rhetorical and symbolic elements that proved useful for the construction of mainland European national identities, largely because islandness, from a continental perspective, was seen as capable of conserving authenticity. This article draws upon the Mediterranean island case studies of Sardinia and Corsica and their relationships to Catalan nationalism, French nationalism, and Italian nationalism as well as wider nation-building processes.
topic Catalan nationalism
Corsica
French nationalism
islands
Italian nationalism
nation-building
Mediterranean Studies
Sardinia
url http://www.islandstudies.ca/sites/default/files/ISJFarinelliIslandMainlandNationalism.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT marcela slandsocietiesandmainlandnationbuildinginthemediterraneansardiniaandcorsicainitalianfrenchandcatalannationalism
_version_ 1724493738379575296