'Anthony D. Smith' (born
1928) is
Professor Emeritus of Nationalism and Ethnicty at the
London School of Economics, and is considered one of the founders of the
interdisciplinary field of
nationalism studies. His best-known contributions to the field are the distinction between 'civic' and 'ethnic' types of
nations and
nationalism, and the idea that all nations have dominant 'ethnic cores'. While Smith agrees with other authors that ''nationalism'' is a
modern phenomenon, he insists that ''nations'' have pre-modern origins.
Smith took his first degree in
Classics and
Philosophy in
Oxford, and his master's degree and doctorate in
Sociology at the
London School of Economics. He is currently Professor of Ethnicity and Nationalism in the European Institute at the
London School of Economics.
He is a former student of the philosopher and
anthropologist Ernest Gellner, but did not share his view of nationalism in the long run. He created an approach of nationalism he called
ethnosymbolism, which is a synthesis of modernist and
traditional views on the subject.
Smith argues that nationalism draws on the pre-existing history of the "group", an attempt to fashion this history into a sense of common identity and shared history. This is not to say that this history should academically valid or cogent - indeed, Smith asserts, many nationalisms are based on historically flawed interpretations of past events and tend to overly mythologise small, inaccurate parts of their history.
Nationalism, according to Smith, does not require that members of a "nation" should all be alike, only that they should feel an intense bond of
solidarity to the nation and other members of their nation. A sense of nationalism can inhabit and be produced from whatever
dominant ideology exists in a given locale. Nationalism builds on pre-existing
kinship, religious and belief systems. Smith describes the
ethnic groups that form the background of modern nations as "
ethnie".
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