Nationalism Studies

Nationalism Studies

A split image shows a hand with fingers crossed on the left, evoking the idea of a noble lie, and a person in military uniform saluting on the right.
This is my country and this is what we stand for. At least for now.
A digitally altered image blending the flags of China and the United States with pixelated and abstract effects, symbolizing a modern digital cold war.
“Technology has always been co-opted for war, but truly intelligent AI, let alone a superintelligence, is a different beast entirely.”
A Venn diagram depicts the overlapping groups of Nordic countries, Scandinavia, Danish Realm, Baltoscandia, Finno-Ugric, Baltic countries, and Balts, with the flags of respective countries.
Because of their large and unfriendly neighbor to the east, the Baltics would rather be Scandinavian.
A painting of a group of boats in a body of water.
Big Think spoke with historian Marc-William Palen about the egalitarian aims of the free-trade movement in past centuries.
The region of Catalonia has been at odds with greater Spain for over 300 years. The prospect of autonomy remains a distant and fading dream.
a map of the area where the trail is located.
Is the vast "Khan Khentii Strictly Protected Area" the final resting place of Genghis Khan?
a pile of uncooked macaroni shells on a white surface.
His plan to replace it with homegrown rice did not go well.
Ivan the Terrible and his son
Created in the 1880s, "Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan," which depicts a father murdering his son, divides Russians to this day.
More than any other nation, Japan tends to feel comfortable with the idea of humanoid robots entering the home.
All nations have founding myths, but none are quite like Russia's.
Time will tell what the reign of Charles III will look like, but one thing is for sure: the “new Elizabethan age” is long gone.
"Strategic ambiguity" has long been the West's strategy on Taiwan.
A dispute marked by flags and booze has been replaced with an official land border.
Putin literature
Vladimir Putin adores Fyodor Dostoevsky. A close reading of the legendary author’s texts reveals the feeling might have been mutual. 
ukraine
Russia has long sought to erase the mere idea of Ukraine. But people like my grandmother, born in Druzhkivka, will not let Russia win.
Growth of Ukraine
The Bolsheviks may have created Ukraine’s current borders, but that doesn’t mean dismantling them is good for today’s Russia.
ukraine
One hundred years ago, a Ukrainian flag flew over Vladivostok and other parts of the “Russian” Far East.
Kiev Motherland Monument
Since Ukraine originally meant “borderland,” the territory was already a target for several kingdoms.
And England almost burned themselves down as a result. “When Benjamin Franklin inveted the lightning rod, the clergy, both in England and America, with enthusiastic support of George III, condemned it […]