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This volume examines how ideas of the nation influenced ordinary people by focusing on their affective lives. Using a variety of sources, methods and cases, ranging from Spain during the age of Revolutions to post-WWII Poland, it demonstrates that emotions are integral to understanding the everyday pull of nationalism on ordinary people.
Andreas Stynen (KU Leuven) is a Postdoctoral Assistant at the Research Group for Cultural History after 1750. Maarten Van Ginderachter (Antwerp University) is a Professor of History at the PoHis Center for Political History. Xosé M. Núñez Seixas (University of Santiago de Compostela) is a Professor of Modern European History.
Introduction: emotions and everyday nationalism in modern European history 1. Feeling nationhood while telling lives: ego-documents, emotions and national character during the Age of Revolutions 2. So close and yet so far: degrees of emotional proximity in pauper letters to Dutch national power holders around 1800 3. 'Lou tresor dóu Felibrige': an Occitan dictionary and its emotional potential for readers 4. Learning to love: embodied practices of patriotism in the Belgian nineteenth-century classroom (and beyond) 5. Performing and remembering personal nationalism among workers in late Russian Poland 6. In search of the true Italy: emotional practices and the nation in Fiume 1919/1920 7. Bringing out the dead: mass funerals, cult of death and the emotional dimension of nationhood in Romanian interwar fascism 8. Feeling the fatherland: Finnish soldiers' lyrical attachments to the nation during the Second World War 9. Emotional communities and the reconstruction of emotional bonds to alien territories: the nationalization of the Polish 'Recovered Territories' after 1945 Conclusions: national(ized) emotions from below