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National identity and foreign policy: nationalism and leadership in Poland, Russia, and Ukraine
Ilya Prizel
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Frontmatter
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Preface (page xi)
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Introduction: statement of arguments (page 1)
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1 National identity and foreign policy: a dialectical relationship (page 12)
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2 Polish identity 1795-1944: from romanticism to positivism to ethnonationalism (page 38)
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3 Poland after World War II: native conservatism and the return to Central Europe (page 75)
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4 Polish foreign policy in perspective: a new encounter with positivism (page 109)
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5 Russia's national identity and the accursed question: a strong state and a weak society (page 153)
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6 Russian identity and the Soviet period (page 180)
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7 Russia's foreign policy reconsidered (page 239)
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8 Ukraine: the ambivalent identity of a submerged nation, 1654-1945 (page 300)
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9 Ukraine after World War II: birth pangs of a modern identity (page 339)
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10 Foreign policy as a means of nation building (page 372)
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11 Conclusion: national identify and politics in the age of the "Mass-Man" (page 404)
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Index (page 428)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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SR | 59.4 (Winter 2000): 879-880 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2697426 |
IA | 75.1 (Jan. 1999): 152-153 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2625493 |
Citable Link
Published: 1998
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
- 9780511822629 (ebook)
- 9780521576970 (paper)
- 9780521571579 (hardcover)