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Private Property and the Origins of ...
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Fuglestad, Eirik Magnus.
Private Property and the Origins of Nationalism in the United States and Norway = The Making of Propertied Communities /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Private Property and the Origins of Nationalism in the United States and Norway/ by Eirik Magnus Fuglestad.
Reminder of title:
The Making of Propertied Communities /
Author:
Fuglestad, Eirik Magnus.
Description:
XVII, 223 p.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
World history. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89950-3
ISBN:
9783319899503
Private Property and the Origins of Nationalism in the United States and Norway = The Making of Propertied Communities /
Fuglestad, Eirik Magnus.
Private Property and the Origins of Nationalism in the United States and Norway
The Making of Propertied Communities /[electronic resource] :by Eirik Magnus Fuglestad. - 1st ed. 2018. - XVII, 223 p.online resource.
1. Introduction: A property rights perspective in the study of nationalism -- I. Agrarian Moment: Land and Freedom -- 2. America: "Destined to let freedom grow" -- 3. Norway: "A free constitution... was centuries in the making" -- II. Industrial Moment: Land to Labour -- 4. The industrial moment in America: "Irrepressible conflict" -- 5. The industrial transformation in Norway: The will of the people -- III. Conclusions -- 6. The nation as propertied community.
In the eighteenth century, before a national political movement took hold in either the United States or Norway, both countries were agrarian societies marked by widespread private land ownership. Tracing the emergence and development of national ideology in each, Eirik Magnus Fuglestad argues that land ownership became tied up with these national ideologies and was ultimately a central driver of nationalism. In this book, the United States and Norway emerge as propertied communities, shaped by historical narratives of self-government and by property regimes that linked popular sovereignty with land ownership. Covering the mid-eighteenth century through industrialization in the nineteenth century, this book lays the groundwork for understanding the rise of nationalism as an agrarian, landed phenomenon, which later became the foundation of industrial society.
ISBN: 9783319899503
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-319-89950-3doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
559582
World history.
LC Class. No.: D17-24.5
Dewey Class. No.: 909
Private Property and the Origins of Nationalism in the United States and Norway = The Making of Propertied Communities /
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1. Introduction: A property rights perspective in the study of nationalism -- I. Agrarian Moment: Land and Freedom -- 2. America: "Destined to let freedom grow" -- 3. Norway: "A free constitution... was centuries in the making" -- II. Industrial Moment: Land to Labour -- 4. The industrial moment in America: "Irrepressible conflict" -- 5. The industrial transformation in Norway: The will of the people -- III. Conclusions -- 6. The nation as propertied community.
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In the eighteenth century, before a national political movement took hold in either the United States or Norway, both countries were agrarian societies marked by widespread private land ownership. Tracing the emergence and development of national ideology in each, Eirik Magnus Fuglestad argues that land ownership became tied up with these national ideologies and was ultimately a central driver of nationalism. In this book, the United States and Norway emerge as propertied communities, shaped by historical narratives of self-government and by property regimes that linked popular sovereignty with land ownership. Covering the mid-eighteenth century through industrialization in the nineteenth century, this book lays the groundwork for understanding the rise of nationalism as an agrarian, landed phenomenon, which later became the foundation of industrial society.
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