Description

Book Synopsis
In Transnational Nationalism and Collective Identity among the American Irish, Howard Lune considers the development and mobilization of different nationalisms over 125 years of Irish diasporic history (17911920) and how these campaigns defined the Irish nation and Irish citizenship.Lune takes a collective approach to exploring identity, concentrating on social identities in which organizations are the primary creative agent to understand who we are and how we come to define ourselves. As exiled Irishmen moved to the United States, they sought to create a new Irish republic following the American model. Lune traces the construction of Irish American identity through the establishment and development of Irish nationalist organizations in the United States. He looks at how networkssuch as societies, clubs, and private organizationscan influence and foster diaspora, nationalism, and nationalist movements.By separating nationalism from the physical nation, Transnational Nationalism and Col

Trade Review
In his brilliant and pathbreaking reflection on the transnational field of Irish nationalism, Howard Lune has provided a succinct analysis of nationalist movements. He convincingly employs insights from studies on nationalism, cross-border identities, and transnational collective action. Lune’s superb account suggests that organizational and transnational perspectives are essential for understanding and critically dealing with central questions of nationalism not only for the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries but also for the globalized world of the twenty-first century. This book is bound to become an essential guide for a new generation of social scientists debating how transnational action and transnationally organized collective identity formation shape cross-border nationalism.
Thomas Faist, Professor of Sociology, Bielefeld University, and author of The Transnationalized Social Question: Migration and the Politics of Social Inequalities in the Twenty-First Century

In Transnational Nationalism and Collective Identity among the American Irish, Howard Lune reveals the interrelationships among individuals and organizations committed to achieving independence for the Irish nation. The aspiration for an independent Irish nation dates from the Enlightenment and later spread throughout the diaspora, creating a transnational movement that still influences Ireland. This is a major contribution to our understanding of social movements, transnational nationalism, organizational fields, collective identity, and the complex relationships between Irish and Irish-American nationalists.
Robert W. White, Professor of Sociology, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI), and author of Out of the Ashes: An Oral History of the Provisional Irish Republican Movement



Table of Contents
Acknowledgments

1. Introduction
2. Nationalist Visions
3. Exporting Nationalism
4. Unfriendly Societies
5. “The Weaponed Arm of the Patriot”
6. Realization
7. Transnational Echoes

Notes
References
Index

Transnational Nationalism and Collective Identity

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    A Paperback / softback by Howard Lune

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      Publisher: Temple University Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 12/06/2020
      ISBN13: 9781439918197, 978-1439918197
      ISBN10: 1439918198

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In Transnational Nationalism and Collective Identity among the American Irish, Howard Lune considers the development and mobilization of different nationalisms over 125 years of Irish diasporic history (17911920) and how these campaigns defined the Irish nation and Irish citizenship.Lune takes a collective approach to exploring identity, concentrating on social identities in which organizations are the primary creative agent to understand who we are and how we come to define ourselves. As exiled Irishmen moved to the United States, they sought to create a new Irish republic following the American model. Lune traces the construction of Irish American identity through the establishment and development of Irish nationalist organizations in the United States. He looks at how networkssuch as societies, clubs, and private organizationscan influence and foster diaspora, nationalism, and nationalist movements.By separating nationalism from the physical nation, Transnational Nationalism and Col

      Trade Review
      In his brilliant and pathbreaking reflection on the transnational field of Irish nationalism, Howard Lune has provided a succinct analysis of nationalist movements. He convincingly employs insights from studies on nationalism, cross-border identities, and transnational collective action. Lune’s superb account suggests that organizational and transnational perspectives are essential for understanding and critically dealing with central questions of nationalism not only for the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries but also for the globalized world of the twenty-first century. This book is bound to become an essential guide for a new generation of social scientists debating how transnational action and transnationally organized collective identity formation shape cross-border nationalism.
      Thomas Faist, Professor of Sociology, Bielefeld University, and author of The Transnationalized Social Question: Migration and the Politics of Social Inequalities in the Twenty-First Century

      In Transnational Nationalism and Collective Identity among the American Irish, Howard Lune reveals the interrelationships among individuals and organizations committed to achieving independence for the Irish nation. The aspiration for an independent Irish nation dates from the Enlightenment and later spread throughout the diaspora, creating a transnational movement that still influences Ireland. This is a major contribution to our understanding of social movements, transnational nationalism, organizational fields, collective identity, and the complex relationships between Irish and Irish-American nationalists.
      Robert W. White, Professor of Sociology, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI), and author of Out of the Ashes: An Oral History of the Provisional Irish Republican Movement



      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments

      1. Introduction
      2. Nationalist Visions
      3. Exporting Nationalism
      4. Unfriendly Societies
      5. “The Weaponed Arm of the Patriot”
      6. Realization
      7. Transnational Echoes

      Notes
      References
      Index

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