In search of an explanation of how a sense of ethnic identity
evolves to create the concept of nation, Armstrong analyzes Islamic
and Christian cultures from antiquity to the nineteenth century. He
explores the effects of institutions--the city, imperial polity,
bureaucratic imperatives of centralization, and language
divisions--on the development of ethnicity. Political science
furnishes the focus, anthropology and sociology provide the
conceptual framework, and history affords the evidence.
Originally published 1982.
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