I would
like to move my discussion from History and Historiography to the subject of nationalism
in this week. As it has been repeatedly
accepted by many prominent academics, the importance of having a fair
understanding for the concepts such as nation and nationalism are critically
important in the contemporary political setup. Particularly, we should accept
that the post-colonial countries like ours have faced fundamental theoretical
issues in defining the term Nation and in fitting it into our state-formation
process. While accepting that we are a multi-ethnic society today, we should
also not forget the fact that some of the ethnic groups, emerged in the
post-colonial social-setup, and the fact that they were empowered by then
colonial empires for their own benefits and were manipulated to clash with one
another just for maintaining the power game.
Meaning of the word Nation
Meanings
and the uses of the word nation have been
in the center of this debate in the nation-state argument of classical political
theories. These discussions sometime move into giving broader interpretations
for the concepts of nationality, nationalism and national consciousness in
theoretical terms. It is correct to say that the debate of nation becomes a
prominent socio-political phenomenon with the inception of nation states in 19th
century. Since the term ‘ethnic group’ has also been used as synonymous to the term
of nation, we should look at the linguistic roots of this word. The term ETHNIC
comes from Greek word ethnikos which
contains the demarcated meaning of some civilized human group from barbarians.
And Latin sources say that the word natio
which was the root for the evaluation of English word nation, means ‘a group of people who shared collective identity and
common culture with identified historical origins of the group. This definition
becomes more problematic when it deals with the European concept of Nationalism
in late 17th century.