Preface to the New and Revised Edition
Preface to the Paperback Reissue
Introduction
Chapter 1. Cultures of Nationalism: Political Cosmology and the Passions
Part I: Evil and the State: Sinhalese Naitonalism, Violence, and the Power of Hierarchy
Chapter 2. Ethnic Violence and the Force of
History in Legend
Chapter 3. Evil, Power, and the State
Chapter 4. Ideological Practice, Ethnic
Nationalism, and the Passions
Part II: People Against the State: Australian Nationalism and Egalitarian Individualism
Chapter 5. When the World Crumbles and the
Heavens Fall In: War, Death, and the Creation of Nation
Chapter 6. But the Band Played “Waltzing
Maltilda”: National Ceremonial and the Anatomy of
Egalitarianism
Chapter 7. Ethnicity and Intolerance: Egalitarian
Nationalism and Its Political Practice
Chapter 8. Nationalism, Tradition, and Political
Culture
Notes
References
Bruce Kapferer is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Bergen. He has held academic positions in Zambia, Manchester, Adelaide, London, and Queensland and carried out extensive fieldwork in Zambia, Sri Lanka, India, Australia, and South Africa.
“…this brilliant book [draws] contrasts worthy of heavy thought and heavier debate.” · American Anthropologist “This edition of the book adds insightful new essays by other scholars of nationalism, which cogently situate the legacy of the work… All of the appended essays update and fortify this original text, which is worth revisiting.” · Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute “This provocative study of the political culture of nationalism in Sri Lanka and Australia … is one of the few genuinely comparative studies in anthropology [and] in taking up such an important question as nationalism it reminds us that truly relevant anthropology questions deep-seated cultural beliefs, including our own.” · Oceania “This is a book about equality and inequality, about the symbols and the ideologies of nation and state, and about violence committed in the name of religions of peace, Buddhism and Hinduism. Kapferer illuminates the modern world—and its horrors.” · Peter Worsley, author of The Third World “By examining the ‘logic of ontology’ manifest in sorcery rites and in ethnic violence, Kapferer gives the book a dual character: it is at once a study of myth, evil, violence and an exercise in the comparative anthropology of nationalism. It is a provocatively ambitious work…” · Times Literary Supplement “The problems addressed in this book are those of modern nationalism, a political development of European origin that now has a worldwide effect…Kapferer’s writing is fluid and powerful…[His work] is an excellent example of what comparative anthropology can be.” · Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford
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