Can Nationalism be a Force for Good?
David Edmonds charts the birth of the nation state and asks whether nationalism can exist in a healthy form.
Arguments over the value of nationalism seem to have been raging for centuries, even though the nation state as we know it has only become widespread in the last two hundred years.
In this programme, David Edmonds tracks the emergence of the nation state and the debate surrounding it. From post-colonial Ghana to contemporary Britain, we hear what nationalism has meant to different people in different contexts, as well as the social and philosophical principles that underlie it.
Contributors:
Professor Michael Billig, Emeritus Professor of Social Sciences at Loughborough University,
Professor Richard Bourke, professor of the history of political thought, University of Cambridge.
Elizabeth Ohene, former Minister of State in Ghana.
Dr Sandra Obradovic, Lecturer in Psychology, The Open University.
Professor Tariq Modood, director of the Bristol University Research Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship.
Dr Sarah Fine, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Cambridge
Producer: Nathan Gower
Studio Manager: James Beard
Editor: Richard Fenton-Smith
Production Co-ordinators: Maria Ogundele and Helena Warwick-Cross
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
Reimagining the Nation
What happens to a nation when its media fragments?
The Court of Putin
Inside the murky world of decision-making in Putin鈥檚 Russia.
A Hundred Glorious Years?
What view of its history does China's Communist Party present, what does it omit and why?
Broadcasts
- Mon 6 Jun 2022 20:30成人快手 Radio 4
- Sun 12 Jun 2022 21:30成人快手 Radio 4
Podcast
-
Analysis
Programme examining the ideas and forces which shape public policy in Britain and abroad.