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214 pages, Paperback
First published May 24, 1990
… There is no reason to deny proto-national feelings to pre-nineteenth-century Serbs, not because they were Orthodox as against neighboring Catholics and Muslims – this would not have distinguished them from Bulgars – but because the memory of the old kingdom defeated by the Turks was preserved in song and heroic story, and, perhaps more to the point, in the daily liturgy of the Serbian church which had canonized most of its kings … The potential popular appeal of a state tradition for modern nationalism, whose object it is to establish the nation as a territorial state, is obvious. It has led some such movements to reach far back beyond the real memory of their peoples in the search for a suitable (and suitably impressive) national state in the past, as in the case of the Armenians, whose last sufficiently important kingdom is to be found not later than the first century BC, or the Croats, whose nationalists saw themselves (implausibly) as the heirs of the noble ‘Croatian political nation’.These sentences are part (perhaps half) of a single paragraph (75-76). I could probably get something out of this paragraph if I read it carefully enough. But why bother? I don’t really care about what the author is saying. It’s too damn much work for too little enlightenment and way too little enjoyment.