CONTENTS // Acknowledgments ix // Introduction 1 // Micheline R. Ishay // Part I The Enlightenment Background of Internationalism // and Nationalism // 1 Jean Jacques Rousseau // The Geneva Manuscript 22 // Judgment on Saint-Pierre’s Project for Perpetual Peace 26 // The Government of Poland 30 // 2 Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès // What Is the Third Estate? 35 // 3 Immanuel KANT // The Metaphysics of Morals 38 // 4 Johann Gottfried von Herder // * Reflections on the Philosophy of the History of Mankind 48 // Part II Liberalism and Nationalism // 5 Johann Gottlieb Fichte // The Foundations of Natural Law According to the // Principles of the Theory of Science 60 // "Addresses to the German Nation 62 // 6 GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH HEGEL // The Philosophy of Right 71 // The Philosophy of World History 79 // 7 Giuseppe Mazzini // The Duties of Man 87 // 8 John Stuart Mill // Considerations on Representative Government 98 // V // vi // CONTENTS // 9 LORD ACTON // Nationality 108 // 10 MAX WEBER // Economic Policy and the National Interest in Imperial // Germany 119 // 11 Theodor Herzl // - A Jewish State 125 // Part III Conservatism and Nationalism // 12 Edmund Burke // Reflections on the Revolution in France 134 // 13 Ernest Renan // - What Is a Nation? 143 // 14 Leopold Ranke // The Great Powers 156 // 15 Elie Kedourie // Nationalism 160 // 16 Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn // Rebuilding Russia 169 // Part IV Socialism, Nationalism, and Internationalism // 17 Karl Marx AND FRIEDRICH ENGELS
Manifesto of the Communist Party 178 // 18 Otto BAUER // The Nationalities Question and Social Democracy 183 // 19 Joseph STALIN // - Marxism and the National-Colonial Question 192 // 20 Rosa Luxemburg // - The National Question and Autonomy 198 // 21 Vladimir Ilyich Lenin // - The Right of Nations to Self-Determination 208 // Part V Integral Nationalism, Fascism, and Nazism // 22 Charles Maurras // The Future of French Nationalism 216 // Contents vii // 23 BENITO Mussolini // -Fascism 222 // 24 Adolf Hitler // - Mein Kampf 230 // Part VI Anticolonialism and National Liberation // Movements // 25 Sun YAT-SEN ■// Three Principles of the People 240 // 26 Jawaharlal Nehru // The Discovery of India 248 // 27 SATI AL-HUSRI // Muslim Unity and Arab Unity 255 // 28 Ayatollah Khomeini // Islamic Government 260 // 29 Leopold Sedar Senghor // On African Socialism 268 // 30 Frantz Fanon // The Wretched of the Earth 274 // Part VII American Perspectives on Nationalism // 31 Abraham Lincoln // First Inaugural Address, March 1861 286 // 32 Randolph Bourne // Transnational America 292 // 33 Marcus Garvey // The Resurrection of the Negro 302 // 34 WOODROW WILSON // Address to a Joint Session of Congress, January 1918 306 // 35 Reinhold Niebuhr // Moral Man and Immoral Society 312 // Part VIII The Contemporary Debate on Nationalism // 36 MICHAEL WALZER // The New Tribalism: Notes on a Difficult Problem 322 // •e • // V111 // CONTENTS // 37 JORGEN HABERMAS // Citizenship and
National Identity: Some Reflections on the // Future of Europe // 38 JEREMY BRECHER // "The National Question” Reconsidered from an Ecological // Perspective // 39 *ERIC HOBSBAWM // - Nationalism in the Late Twentieth Century // Index // 333 // 344 // 362 // 373