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"nationhood" Definitions
  1. the fact or feeling of being a nation

194 Sentences With "nationhood"

How to use nationhood in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "nationhood" and check conjugation/comparative form for "nationhood". Mastering all the usages of "nationhood" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Both draw on similarly cramped ideas about nationhood and sovereignty.
Symbolically, swans have long been entwined with nationhood and identity.
And Wagner's myths were too limiting, too bounded by nationhood.
The Catalan crisis leads to a final question about nationhood: Can Western Europe's nations hope to preserve their wealth and high living standards in a globalized economy without pooling their nationhood into something greater?
This includes even most of the minority that talks about nationhood.
These relationships are a primary obligation of the United States' nationhood.
The history of nationhood is a history of boundaries marked on land.
Abstract discussions about the meaning of nationhood sometimes slip into current events.
But it did mark the peak formative period of modern Korean nationhood.
Uri Averny (1923–2018), Israeli journalist, politician, and advocate for Palestinian nationhood.
In this respect, the exhibition transcends thorny questions of identity and nationhood.
In the years since, numerous attempts at nationhood have been largely quashed.
Months later, Northern Rhodesia achieved nationhood as the new republic of Zambia.
New powers, such as the Islamic State, have redefined nationhood by ideological acculturation.
Of course, nationhood—as the Scottish have shown—doesn't have to be dangerous.
Or Janacek, who deployed similar brass fanfares for his own explorations of nationhood.
It's easy to read these fables of nationhood as curios from another age.
Plus it really doesn't have a permanent population, a long-standing prerequisite for nationhood.
The challenge to the existing idea of nationhood began with the end of Communism.
Multiple attempts at greater autonomy or nationhood since then have been suppressed or quashed.
He talked about pride, independence, nationhood, sovereignty, dignity, making our own laws and decisions.
He later championed Polish nationhood, fighting bravely for what was then a lost cause.
Even some who disagree with Mr Puigdemont's methods believe Catalonia has a case for nationhood.
Thanks to Hitler, it's hard to advocate on behalf of any model of Christian nationhood.
In office, he used his tremendous prestige to consolidate American nationhood at an uncertain moment.
They want to defend their culture and emphasize the bonds of nationhood — flag, Constitution, patriotism.
He regarded British nationhood as a fixed entity rather than something that was constantly being reinvented.
Lessons about racial purity and blood-based nationhood have, however, disappeared from textbooks in recent years.
These fights ended badly: in 1885, Riel was executed and the prime minister shunned Métis nationhood.
Some Ukrainians say the library's fate is another example of their nationhood being undermined by Russia.
Some Kurds who favor independence eventually say the region yet lacks the democratic institutions for nationhood.
And how do those representations take into account delicate geopolitical issues, like nationhood, ethnicity, religion, and war?
Yet for the French, Notre Dame is the closest physical embodiment of their deep sense of nationhood.
Let me be clear, Californian nationhood is a very unlikely hypothetical, but some crazy hypotheticals come true.
The nexus of competing interests, though, spreads beyond economic considerations, evoking questions of pride, sovereignty and nationhood.
Every day nations ask young people to sacrifice their young lives for the sake of perceived nationhood.
Without some means of enforcing it, we would be unable to perform the most basic functions of nationhood.
Kapoor's father starred in the plays which touched on the plight of refugees, nationhood, and the country's trajectory.
Ms. Olexa thinks all the bluster about pride and nationhood, on both sides of the border, may fade.
Cyprus is blocking that unless Ankara gives ground on long-standing disputes with it and recognizes Cypriot nationhood.
"How Europeans See America" is a five-minute film that touches on themes of nationhood, fairness and perspective.
It is mainly a way to gauge interest on whether Californians prefer statehood or want to move toward nationhood.
But it is the duplicity in the cause of nationhood that makes "The King" feel so vital and challenging.
With tribal nationhood already under siege, the arrival of House Resolution 288 in 19733 landed as a death blow.
Like any great work of art, Hamilton provides fertile ground for exploring issues of nationhood, identity, race, and gender.
The U.S., which played an instrumental role in bringing about South Sudan's nationhood, has been the most generous supporter.
But the drama of what some scholars call "banal nationalism" is no less important to the modern future of nationhood.
In its early years of nationhood, the country had a distinct but austere tradition of mosque architecture to draw on.
No one party has ever won an outright majority of the 120-seat Knesset (parliament) in 71 years of nationhood.
Gwadar is located in Pakistan's restive Baluchistan province, where a low-intensity separatist insurgency for nationhood has been bubbling for decades.
Eventually the Congress, White House and federal courts rejected the anti-statehood party's declaration of separate sovereign nationhood with U.S. citizenship.
King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 88, held the throne for more than 70 years, establishing himself as a revered personification of Thai nationhood.
Now it is time for us to take the final step toward full nationhood and dissolve our ties with Mother England.
After all, there is no single style of architecture that represents nationhood — or that does not, and should not, provoke debate.
First, the greatest strength of Three Houses isn't its tactical gameplay or its multi-perspective narrative about revolutions, grief, and nationhood.
While vying for environmental protections, the actual nationhood of Pacific Island states is also caught within an international fight for recognition.
The experiment in nationhood and democracy was a proposition on the fringes of world experience, with safe money betting on its failure.
The Isle of Man may look and feel like coastal Britain, but it guards its independence, and it values symbols of nationhood.
In his new book, Invisible Countries: Journeys to the Edge of Nationhood, Joshua Keating traces that disparity through the decades that followed.
Mr. Matos is also right to say that Puerto Rico's territory status should be discarded in favor of either statehood or nationhood.
In a 2012 referendum 54 percent voted to reject the current status, including the false promise of separate nationhood with U.S. citizenship.
The Sultan's caliphate was parceled up into trans-tribal, trans-ethnic and trans-secular countries whose citizens were new to such nationhood.
Native citizenship and nationhood is often messy, or at the very least vexing, a direct result of the jagged violence of colonization.
It transcended those sorts of stereotypes and arguably was sort of a cross-class puddle: without genre and race, and without nationhood.
According to Marinelli, the so-called Calexit backers have about 7,000 supporters mobilized to gather signatures statewide for the new California nationhood initiative.
The Hyphenated Lives series includes mutated fauna and flora that manifest as creatures subverting their prescribed roles as icons of nationhood and state.
Freedom and security have been less conceptually resonant in the Trump era than questions of citizenship, nationhood, personhood, and the rule of law.
In his work to date he has proved himself to be a refreshingly astute observer of ideas of nationhood, exile, censorship and surveillance.
Brazil and South Africa have immense problems, but you may count on them to succeed because the fabric of their nationhood is resilient.
I believe that David Buckel sacrificed his life for something greater than nationhood or national interest, he sacrificed his life for all mankind.
Brexit was predicated on the assumption that there is a singular, unified notion of Britishness that must be rescued from the clutches of an international, multicultural world in order to preserve its uniqueness; Himid's intervention suggests that the fabric of nationhood is necessarily contingent on difference — that nationhood is in fact a recognition of difference with the promise of solidarity.
"We also had a discussion about nationhood and what we stand for and I don't think we should shy away from that," Key said.
Membership in the European Union is not the essence of the country's nationhood, but it gives Britain global punch and secures its economic prosperity.
Their presence undercuts a Thai sense of nationhood that is girded by a triumvirate of institutions: the military, the monarchy and the Buddhist monastery.
One can say what one likes about fragile Italian nationhood, but when the national team wins a World Cup game, the celebrations are extraordinary.
Palestinian nationhood has been forged through conflict and suffering over many decades and there is no way they will simply surrender their legitimate rights.
Because one is rich, famous, and popular, does not give him the right to disrespect a symbol which stands for nationhood in innumerable ways.
"It is possible that inspiration for such dress is gleaned from mass stereotyping and superficial ideas of [African] nationhood," she said in an email.
In between, he traces what is by now a familiar story: the growth of the federal government over more than two centuries of American nationhood.
To name territory is to claim it, enticing settlers, fostering a sense of nationhood, erasing the indigenous population and bison that lie in the way.
The value of liberty, the dignity of work, the principles of nationhood, family, economic prudence, patriotism, and putting power in the hands of the people.
That is largely thanks to Jinja Honcho, which lobbies for conservative causes, for the sake "of our nation and nationhood", as Mr Tanaka puts it.
An exhibition in Chiang Mai, Thailand contends with the pain and despair of life washed in economic disparity, genocide, war, and the complexities of nationhood.
To address why museums are not attended more by ethnically diverse backgrounds, one has to address the fundamental questions of representation, nationhood, patronage and more.
Over his long reign, the king came to embody the spirit and sense of nationhood of Thailand and his death has been a national trauma.
The Catalans actively participated in that process, helping to draw up the first Spanish Constitution, the Cádiz one in 1812, which established Spain's modern nationhood.
The chant, "You will not replace us," seems to bear an unconscious trace of this history, even as it disavows the contingency of settler nationhood.
Like other minorities — the Kachin or the Shan — the Rakhine had a history that had to be bent, through force if necessary, to Burmese nationhood.
But while Madrid insists Spain is indivisible under its constitution, the Aran Valley underlines the complex nature of nationhood in such a culturally diverse country.
At the heart of this issue lies the question of nationhood, specifically, the difficulties faced by nations formed at the latter end of modern European history.
Perhaps "Game of Thrones" functions as a cultural reset button, inviting us to imagine how we might redo nationhood and industrialism if we had the chance.
We could say there are two ideal (and simplified) kinds of nationhood: one anchored firmly in ethnicity and culture and another built on a civil creed.
The first is that of nationhood itself, and then, trickier still, the promise of a comprehensive representation of the discourse of the nation state in question.
Space law experts, such as Mark Sundahl of the Global Space Law Center at Cleveland State University, are pretty dubious about its chances of ascending to nationhood.
What all the countries with high theistic scores have in common is a collective sense that faith, along with culture and nationhood, has survived against the odds.
And perversely but not unexpectedly, Nordic countries where the (Protestant) church has ceremonial privileges are among the least convinced that the faith should be connected with nationhood.
That is why leaders of certain factions urged people not to vote, as they knew that the current territorial status and nationhood were going to lose badly.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Questions around nationhood, tax autonomy, international representation and policy powers are at the heart of Sunday's violence-marred independence referendum in Catalonia, Spain's wealthiest region.
Only in the last quarter-century has Latvia been able to reclaim its nationhood, and only in the last decade has it felt secure in that claim.
And given its importance as a pillar of Thai nationhood and identity, that could be disastrous in a country already prone to deep divisions and political turmoil.
By throwing open the population register, the Turkish government — unwittingly — might have changed our ideas of Turkish nationhood and ended the myth of racial purity for good.
And yet for all their complexities, both Northern Ireland and Brexit have a way of making plain the extent to which nationhood is bound up with fantasy.
"For this early phase of Asgardian nationhood ... I am primarily responsible for its financing, along with a number of other donors who are citizens of Asgardia," he said.
Most would probably be satisfied with a new deal that gave them clearer powers, let them keep more of their money and symbolically recognised their sense of nationhood.
In Europe, populist politicians are proposing an ethnic understanding of nationhood, based not on a shared respect for constitutional principles and laws but on common descent and religion.
It was like a citizen forum, used by people to express their ideas of identity, nationhood, and citizenship, which often were contrasting and created a space for contention.
Japan has uniquely embraced cuteness as a reflection of its national character, the way tea ceremonies or cherry blossoms were once held up as symbolic of Japanese nationhood.
It does not help matters that during India's independence struggle against Britain, patriots seeking symbols for Indian nationhood tried to elevate Bharat Mata into a pukka Hindu deity.
Abiy tends to stress nationhood, with its sense of gradual consolidation, rather than the frictions of empire; according to the museum, Ethiopia is a nation with ancient roots.
A new totalizing ethos seeks to supplant the pluralism of Nehru and Gandhi with a monolithic vision of nationhood steeped in the supremacist ideology of Hindutva ("Hindu-ness").
Players from opposing sides put aside their differences and come together to unite under the kaleidoscopic gauze of nationhood—bound by birth, if not political and cultural affiliation.
But instead of stepping closer to nationhood, the Kurds were handed a humiliating setback: Iraqi troops seized the disputed city of Kirkuk and the oil fields around it.
"Parsifal" can persuasively be a parable of ecological disaster, of tormented nationhood, of — as in the Metropolitan Opera's far more interesting production — the great rift between the sexes.
But the notion of nationhood in the Hebrew Bible and later Jewish thought is not the same as the modern conception of nations as territorially bounded political entities.
The first was when the Constitutional Tribunal in 2010 watered down a new autonomy statute, which recognised Catalonia's sense of nationhood and granted additional legal powers to the Generalitat.
Rather than seeking to understand politics and nationhood in terms of personal relationships, it draws on the language of Britain's troubled multiculturalism to tell an equally troubled romantic tale.
"Cities like Munich, Cologne and Berlin now have more in common with each other than with their own hinterlands," says Michael Bröning, author of a new book on nationhood.
Borrowing from that old far-right playbook, Vox has claimed a monopoly on nationhood, arrogantly proclaiming what the nation is and who its true citizens are and are not.
Recently, it appears to connote as much a feeling of rebellion against a security apparatus seen as operating with an unnecessarily heavy hand, as a concrete demand for nationhood.
"Strengthen public identification of every ethnic group with the great motherland, with Chinese nationhood and with Chinese culture," Mr. Xi said at a meeting on Xinjiang at the time.
The inevitability of a next step, along with its accompanying state of anticipation, has itself been woven into the fabric of South (and North) Korean nationhood since its inception.
Just as the construction of race pointedly solidified whiteness as the most powerful race, the construction of a racialized Middle Ages made white nationhood the dominant narrative of the era.
Hamann's contemporary, the philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder, made the critical link between language, culture and nationhood, and soon authenticity of language became associated with another product of Enlightenment thought: nationalism.
So please, 'in the name of God and of the dead generations from which Ireland receives her old tradition of nationhood,' boycott Trump's St. Patrick's Day gathering at the White House.
A modern, liberal approach should be accepting of multilayered sovereignty, identity and nationhood, and should at most advance a type of soft cosmopolitan patriotism which never goes as far as nationalism.
The logic behind e-Estonia shows how a national state deploys global digital technologies to bolster nationhood and statehood, rather than to realize the long-propagated mythos of a global village.
Perhaps it was because he was all these things that King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who died on Thursday at age 88, became the personification of Thai nationhood in his 70-year reign.
The installation nods to various Scottish stereotypes like our love of drinking and self-pity — "We <22006 Alcohol" and "We <22006 Failure" — as well as hinting at constructions of Scottish nationhood.
Bourne was right to understand that the best change is dialogical, the gradual, grinding conversation, pitting interest against interest, one group's imperfections against another's, but bound by common nationhood and humanity.
He had in mind the Battle of Valmy, at which the French revolutionary army, imbued, it is said, with a new spirit of nationhood, beat the Prussians, who outnumbered and outgunned them.
This ethnocentric conception of nationhood is what America's founding generations gratefully left behind when they reached the New World, where they built a nation out of acquiescence to a shared social contract.
Today's superpower, the United States, has by the measure of modern nations risen on a relatively steep arc: nationhood some 241 years ago, leader of the free world about 70 years back.
Reaching out to a thankless regime under the pretext of shared nationhood may contribute to an immediate reduction in tensions, but he is alienating a large segment of the South Korean electorate.
WM: Right, because I think so much of what we're talking about is the ways in which identity are bound up in totems of, of nationhood, but then by extension, also selfhood.
MALCOLM ROBERTSChief executiveAustralian Petroleum Production and Exploration AssociationCanberra, Australia Your briefing on China's view of ethnicity and nationhood painted a generally accurate picture of China's Han-centred order ("The upper Han", November 20.02th).
"I wanted to make a point of voting away from religion and sectarianism" and "instill a sense of nationhood and patriotism in the hearts of our children," said one voter, Khalid al-Dabbagh.
In the big and relatively secular nations of western Europe, a majority rejects the idea of Christianity as a necessary condition for national belonging, but quite substantial minorities continue to link nationhood and religion.
One way or another, many Somalilanders desperately want their country to be recognised by the international community, and have attempted to raise awareness of their fight for nationhood in a wide variety of ways.
I wanted to present the flags as indistinguishable cross-pollinating visual symbols, to empty and reconfigure their purported intent — as symbols of state sovereignty and nationhood — in order to blur and transcend national borders.
White-ruled nations considered the very existence of a Black republic a threat — the US refused to recognize Haitian nationhood until after the Civil War, then continued to deny Haiti basic respect for its sovereignty.
"We believe that preservation of the flag as a symbol of nationhood and national unity is a compelling and valid state interest," Kathi Alyce Drew said on behalf of Texas during the 1989 oral argument.
Through video, diagram, text, and photography, Abu Hamdan explores the ways in which words, sounds, and accents are bound to nationhood, identity, and borders; linguistic uses and misuses to legal systems; misunderstanding to bodily harm.
In January, for example, a U.S.-based employee of the Marriott hotel chain "liked" a Twitter post about the nationhood of Tibet, a Chinese region in which some citizens have long desired greater autonomy from China.
We worry a lot these days about political polarization, the unpleasant choices such polarization leaves us with at the ballot box, its effects on what used to be our common values, our shared sense of nationhood.
Some contentious topics have begun to emerge: the separation of powers, tensions between the rule of law and individual freedoms, the notion of solidarity, nationhood and identity, Europe and the place of minorities, especially religious ones.
For Mr. Eissenstat, the academic, the experience of Alevis under Mr. Erdogan illustrates that the president's conception of Turkish nationhood, which fleetingly seemed to include room for diversity, is ultimately just as chauvinistic as his predecessors'.
While Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore's first and longest serving prime minister and father of the current prime minister, Lee Hsien Loong, dominates the official narrative of Singapore's nationhood, Liew's story includes the role played by Lee's rivals.
One could argue that there is by now a tendency for a literal interpretation of visual metaphors like those in the Hyphenated Lives series, given that ideas of identity and nationhood demand a different kind of reimagining.
Luis GutierrezLuis Vicente GutierrezDHS to make migrants wait in Mexico while asylum claims processed Coffman loses GOP seat in Colorado Trump changes mean only wealthy immigrants may apply, says critic MORE (D-Ill.), a proponent of nationhood.
As a result, the core of Indian nationhood is premised upon the centrality of Hindu religion and values, and any opposition to this tenuous narrative has to be violently stamped out or slapped with charges of sedition.
Korea's loss of sovereignty to Japan in 1910 occurred in a tumultuous era shaped by external forces both threatening and enlightening: Imperialist pressures proved impossible to overcome, but they also aroused an acute awareness of Korean nationhood.
Composed of a three-channel projection, flags, a relief sculpture, and archival materials, Meyenberg's project takes a critical stance toward normative pedagogical structures in the form of uniforms, discipline, education, gender, the state, and symbols of nationhood.
Connor's music, most notably "The Hockey Song" which is ubiquitous in hockey and was recently inducted into the Canadian Song Writers' Hall of Fame, typically signifies to English Canada a sense of nationhood intended to unify people.
The session provided another reminder of how comfortable some politicians feel—sitting in Congress, knowing they are on video—voicing their dismissal of sovereign nationhood, even on an issue as important as protecting women from sexual violence.
Citizens can send a request to their federal member of parliament for certain "nationhood material," which includes an official portrait of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, the country's head of state, or his royal highness, The Duke of Edinburgh.
Even more emotional than the already fraught subject of nationhood can be, this shifting, Jules Rimet trophy–centered mathematics is based on any number of variables, arbitrary and often nonsensical, with place of birth being among the least important.
While SDSM prepare to take this issue to parliament and interpretations as to the low turnout appear on all sides, Macedonia's name dispute continues to be one of the Balkan region's many remarkable and thorny studies in modern nationhood.
If you didn't know anything about the context, you could almost wind up thinking there was something vaguely whimsical going on, some gigantic and inscrutable performance-art piece that maybe had something to do with the fictionality of nationhood.
When you've been living in another country for a certain amount of time, the idea of nationhood and home start to mean something very peculiar, something important and special that no one should be able to take away from you.
As mayor, Mr Khan has a unique platform, not confined to the city or even Britain, that he should use to promote a pluralistic sort of nationhood, ease tensions between ethnic and religious groups and highlight failures and successes of integration.
Thinkers like Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Locke drew on a well-established sense of nationhood, particularly visible in England, to explain how individual citizens have the right to join freely in a nation that will protect and benefit them.
If freely chosen on terms prescribed by Congress, only statehood, or alternatively true nationhood consistent with the right of independence, can fully empower people to preserve their cultural diversity, while also securing equal rights and opportunity for freedom and prosperity.
And when multiple groups lay claim to nationhood within the same territory, "ethnic cleansing" can come to seem like a grim but effective solution, a way to make ethnic and national borders line up by forcing out members of competing groups.
" In these later chapters, Hahn's beguiling border metaphor all but disappears until he reminds us that by the first decade of the 20th century, "the borders of American nationhood were well secured while the borders of American power remained limitless.
On World Oceans Day, the Plastic Oceans Foundation and British entertainment website LADbible submitted an application for nationhood to the United Nations, claiming that world leaders would have to cooperate to eradicate the floating pollution as per the UN's environmental charters.
In the British context, specifically, he believed that this fundamental sense of nationhood—what it means to be "English", as he always called it—was most clearly expressed in the tradition of parliamentary sovereignty, and the rule of the sovereign through Parliament.
On sprawling, defining themes like the vocation of the state, the meaning of nationhood, the interaction of public and private spheres, and the roles of pluralism, globalisation and citizenship in modern societies it has no continuity and is irredeemably at odds with itself.
King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand, who took the throne of the kingdom once known as Siam shortly after World War II and held it for more than 70 years, establishing himself as a revered personification of Thai nationhood, died on Thursday in Bangkok.
The new Macedonian church—a marker in this part of the world of nationhood—has not received support from the Serbian church, and its status continues to remain contested, very much like the dispute between the respective Ukrainian and the Russian Orthodox churches.
Clinton is also clearly much more statist than Trump, and in fact it is difficult to discern in her rhetoric a sense of nationhood standing apart from state institutions and policies — this is a major source of her emotional deficit as a politician.
Mr. Trump's son-in-law and main Middle East adviser, Jared Kushner, is seeking support from Saudi Arabia and other Arab nations for the plan, which will probably include economic aid for the Palestinians but will not address their aspirations to nationhood.
One thing Marshall has taken away from his many years reporting abroad is that no matter how cosmopolitan they might seem, nations are essentially "tribes with flags," as the diplomat Tahseen Bashir famously put it while extolling the nationhood of his native Egypt.
It's paradoxical and even perverse that those who call themselves "patriots" -- from the tea party to the armed militia in Oregon -- are in fact undermining the very notion of our nationhood and our patriotic values through demagoguery while demonizing everyone who is not them.
Op-Ed Contributor LONDON — The recent independence referendums in Iraqi Kurdistan and Catalonia, and the predictable heavy-handed responses from the central governments in Baghdad and Madrid, have raised many questions — a catechism without answers — on the meaning of nationhood in the 21st century.
He and others bristled at the tight leash Mr. Harper kept on his cabinet, but a government motion giving Quebec a form of nationhood within Canada was too much for Mr. Chong; he resigned rather than vote for the motion, as cabinet rules required.
Though the view that modern Canada was created out of the country's involvement in World War I is now widely held outside Quebec, a debate continues over the degree to which the sense of nationhood can be attributed to the Battle of Vimy Ridge.
But that narrative, she reports, is now being challenged: A widespread interest in surfing among indigenous Australians has not only served as a source of pride for them; it has also played a role in their politics by promoting a competing vision of nationhood.
Motus returns to one of its favorite haunts, La MaMa in the East Village, to consider the possibility of a world unfettered by nationalism — and, heck, even nationhood — in the sprawling performance piece "Panorama," which suggests that to migrate is simply to do what comes naturally.
Jews often trace their nationhood back to the biblical kingdoms of David and Solomon, circa 950 BC. Modern Zionism, building on the longstanding Jewish yearning for a "return to Zion," began in the 19th century — right about the time that nationalism started to rise in Europe.
"At this critical moment where our nationhood and our collective future is at stake, we remind you of your moral and political obligations to meaningfully reconcile with each other as well as with all other political leaders in our country," South Sudanese Civil Society Forum said in a statement.
To create a mythical and simplistic version of the past — in which America was founded not just as a nation of Christians, deists, and other post-Enlightenment thinkers working out a complicated project of nationhood, but as a clear-cut theocratic state — is to provide an easy, useful narrative.
EU efforts to conclude a deal with Turkey to halt the human tide in return for political and economic rewards hit a setback on Tuesday when EU member Cyprus vowed to block efforts to speed up Ankara's EU accession talks unless Turkey meets its obligations to recognize its nationhood.
The book also deals a lot with inherited trauma—my parents died when I was very young—and being an orphan, and trying to navigate what a lot of things mean, what sexuality means, what nationhood means, all of these different things as you are coming up in America.
Mr. Trump's son-in-law and main Middle East adviser, Jared Kushner, is seeking support from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and other Arab nations for the plan, which is expected to include economic aid for the Palestinians but not help in their goals for nationhood.
Longings for separate nationhood have roiled the area for generations, and in this new translation Bush offers a fresh look at the region through the context of the Spanish Civil War, a conflict English readers may best know in literature through writers like Ernest Hemingway and Muriel Rukeyser.
" A website for the firm Mr. Hanson runs, Security Studies Group, says it focuses on "defending the value of American power against the true threats we face" against a Washington elite that has been "unable or unwilling to address and communicate the most basic requirements of American nationhood.
" I wrote in an earlier op-ed that "out of a bloodstained Partition there emerged two ideas of nationhood -- a progressive, pluralistic and inclusive impulse that became the idea of the Republic of India and a theocratic template that became the idea of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
Deborah A. Rosen, a professor at Lafayette College, was cited for "Border Law: The First Seminole War and American Nationhood" (Harvard University Press), which describes how that conflict, which lasted from 1816 to 1818, laid the legal groundwork for the Monroe Doctrine, westward expansion and the Dred Scott decision of 1857.
Coley has often examined trauma and the aftermath of terrorist acts through his work, but seen in the context of this exhibition, the eeriness of the piece also encourages questions of nationhood, such as: If a nation can be so easily recreated on foreign soil, then what exactly is its value?
There was something powerfully transformative about student activists dousing the statue's plinth in human excrement -- this was the moment when South African public space was claimed from apartheid and colonialism's bronzed grip, the moment when the past was both symbolically and literally fouled, and the first nascent steps toward real nationhood were taken.
In a curious moment of agreement with Schmitt, Arendt cites him in "The Origins," in describing how the state's rising domination and possession of the category of nationhood in the 18th and 19th centuries leads wealthy and powerful elites to claim that they are rising above party faction only when it suits their interests.
In 2017, at Documenta 14 in Athens and Kassel, he unveiled "Whispering Campaign," a bravura undertaking in which live performers wandered the cities broadcasting prerecorded monologues in English, German and Greek about nationhood and borders, with hidden speakers in public locations across both cities transmitting still more, the words seeming to haunt the exhibition itself.
Pouyan's work, which takes its name from a line of a poem by the 13th-century Persian scholar, Rumi, unmasks the fiction of nationhood and critiques the legitimacy of racial purity in neoliberal agendas, not only in the political [or wider] world, but in the Euro-American art world too, which routinely tokenizes artists according to their race and cultural origins, in order to marginalize them.
In keeping with the British social psychologist Michael Billig's notion of "banal nationalism" — that nationhood is most powerfully reinforced not through grand gestures but the small, mundane repetitions that slip under the surface of conscious life — it might be as simple as the prosaic affirmation of beginning the day with a bowl of tahini drizzled with grape molasses, at once earthy and sweet; of aunties arguing over how much cinnamon to put in the rice.

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