Examining the history of nationalism's pervasive influence on
modern politics and cultural identities, Lloyd Kramer discusses how
nationalist ideas gained emotional and cultural power after the
revolutionary upheavals in the late eighteenth-century Atlantic
world.
Nationalism in Europe and America analyzes the multiple
historical contexts and intellectual themes that have shaped modern
nationalist cultures, including the political claims for national
sovereignty, the emergence of nationalist narratives in historical
writing and literature, the fusion of nationalism and religion, and
the overlapping conceptions of gender, families, race, and national
identities. Kramer emphasizes the similarities in American and
European nationalist thought, showing how European ideas about
land, history, and national destiny flourished in the United States
while American ideas about national independence and political
rights reappeared among European nationalists and also influenced
the rise of anticolonial nationalisms in twentieth-century Asia and
Africa. By placing nationalist ideas and conflicts within the
specific, cross-cultural framework of Atlantic history and
extending his analysis to the twentieth-century world wars, Kramer
offers readers a thoughtful perspective on nationalism's enduring
political and cultural importance throughout the modern world.