Local politics in an international context: a linguistic analysis of community resiliency in Memphis, TN

2019 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 350-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leah Cathryn Windsor ◽  
Andrew J. Hampton ◽  
James Grayson Cupit ◽  
Alistair James Windsor
2020 ◽  
pp. 58-79
Author(s):  
Leah Cathryn Windsor ◽  
Andrew J. Hampton ◽  
James Grayson Cupit ◽  
Alistair James Windsor

2004 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 253-257
Author(s):  
Alessandro Brogi

This is a story of a missed opportunity. Italian national identity emerged in the modern era on a feeble institutional basis. However, the completion of the country's unity with World War I offered the Italian Liberal state and its administrative elites a great chance. Italy's leaders and officials made the most conspicuous attempt to assert their function as genuine public servants of the general interest—the most effective way to corroborate a sense of national community from the top—by mastering the fervent irredentism in the Venezia Giulia with a mixture of encouragement and moderation. And yet, after four years, this enlightened conduct had to yield to the fanatic and counterproductive nationalism of the far right. Maura Hametz provides a perceptive explanation of this missed opportunity by focusing on the interplay between national choices and local politics in Trieste. Even better, Hametz's essay narrates the story at the microlevel with frequent reference to the international context, thus using a rare combination of ethnocultural and diplomatic history approaches. Few studies of national identity dare encroach on traditional diplomatic history territory. But when dealing with the border disputes among Austria's successor states, it becomes crucial to fit the anthropological and sociological aspects of microhistory into the general history of Europe's balance of power.


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