ABSTRACT

Nations and Capital: The Missing Link in Global Expansion is a groundbreaking analysis of the ultimate reasons for the emergence of nations and nationalism, as a socio-political and geopolitical instrument in the global expansion of capitalism.

The author provides the missing link in the relationship between nationalism and capitalism and offers a comprehensive critique of classical theories of nationalism, well illustrated by historical examples. He develops an original theory of nations and nationalism, relying on the assumption that the incessant widening of the gap between the capitalist elites and the labouring masses inevitably makes the endless accumulation of capital socially unsustainable. Bridging that gap without changing the structure of society becomes the paramount task for the system, which has to introduce nationalism as a social glue tailored to conceal, but also to cement, the actual polarisation of society.

This book will be of great interest to advanced undergraduate students, postgraduate students, and researchers in political science, sociology, history, international relations, security studies, social and political theory, and nationalism studies.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|58 pages

Nations as nationalism

chapter |10 pages

Chapter I

chapter |14 pages

Chapter II

chapter |8 pages

Chapter III

chapter |15 pages

Chapter IV

chapter |9 pages

Chapter V

part II|50 pages

No capitalism without nationalism

chapter |15 pages

Chapter VI

chapter |16 pages

Chapter VII

chapter |7 pages

Chapter VIII

chapter |10 pages

Chapter IX