Site frozen. Go to Anthrograph for the latest [July 4, 2025]

I am pleased to announce that I am debuting a new site for teaching resources at https://anthrograph.rschram.org. Please visit and browse.

The Anthrocyclopaedia will remain for now as an archive but will no longer be updated. I will be manually moving materials from this site to Anthrograph from today, editing and updating as I go. Thanks for your visits over the many years---over 10!---that this site has been active. I look forward to welcoming you to a new teaching site.

Ryan Schram's Anthrocyclopaedia

Anthropology presentations and learning resources

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2700:2022:9 [2022/04/25 00:25] – [The nation as an imagined community] Ryan Schram (admin)2700:2022:9 [2022/04/25 00:25] (current) – [The nation as an imagined community] Ryan Schram (admin)
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   * European states did not create nationalism. Andersonian nationalism in the sense of an imagined community emerges on colonial frontiers.    * European states did not create nationalism. Andersonian nationalism in the sense of an imagined community emerges on colonial frontiers. 
     * Creole (or mestizo) populations of European colonial territories developed their own sense of themselves as national “imagined communities” (Anderson [1983] 2006, 58–59).     * Creole (or mestizo) populations of European colonial territories developed their own sense of themselves as national “imagined communities” (Anderson [1983] 2006, 58–59).
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 ===== The limits of the imagined-community thesis ===== ===== The limits of the imagined-community thesis =====
2700/2022/9.1650871510.txt.gz · Last modified: 2022/04/25 00:25 by Ryan Schram (admin)