Dictionary Definition
nation
Noun
1 a politically organized body of people under a
single government; "the state has elected a new president";
"African nations"; "students who had come to the nation's capitol";
"the country's largest manufacturer"; "an industrialized land"
[syn: state, country, land, commonwealth, res publica,
body
politic]
2 the people who live in a nation or country; "a
statement that sums up the nation's mood"; "the news was announced
to the nation"; "the whole country worshipped him" [syn: land, country, a people]
3 a federation of tribes (especially native
American tribes); "the Shawnee nation"
4 United States prohibitionist who raided saloons
and destroyed bottles of liquor with a hatchet (1846-1911) [syn:
Carry
Nation,
Carry Amelia Moore Nation]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- nā'shən, /ˈneɪʃən/, /"neIS@n/
Etymology 1
From Old & modern French nation, from Latin natio, from nat-, past participle stem of nasci “to be born”Noun
- A group of people
sharing aspects of language, culture and/or ethnicity.
- The Roma are a nation without a country.
- A historically constituted, stable community of people, formed
on the basis of a common language, territory, economic life, and
psychological
make-up manifested in a common culture
- The Kurdish people constitute a nation in the Middle East
- (international law) A sovereign state.
- Though legally single nations, many states comprise several distinct cultural or ethnic groups.
Usage notes
Following the establishment of the Scottish and Welsh parliaments, England, Scotland and Wales are normally considered distinct nations. Application of the term nation to the United Kingdom as a whole is deprecated in most style guides, including the BBC, most newspapers and in UK Government publications. Northern Ireland, being of less clear legal status, generally remains a province.Derived terms
Translations
group of people sharing aspects of language,
culture and/or ethnicity
- Arabic: ,
- Aramaic:
- Bosnian: nacija
- Breton: broad
- Chinese: 国家 (guójiā)
- Croatian: nacija
- Czech: národ
- Danish: nation
- Dutch: natie, staat
- Esperanto: nacio
- Finnish: kansa
- French: nation
- German: Nation
- Hebrew: אומה
- Hungarian: nemzet
- Icelandic: þjóð
- Interlingua: nation
- Italian: nazione
- Japanese: 国家 (こっか, kokka)
- Korean: 국민 (gukmin)
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: نیشتیمان, نهتهوه
- Malayalam: രാജ്യം (raajyam) (3)
- Norwegian: nasjon
- Novial: natione
- Polish: naród
- Portuguese: nação
- Russian: нация (nátsija) , народ (naród)
- Serbian:
- Slovene: narod
- Spanish: nación
- Swahili: taifa, mataifa pl (noun 5/6)
- Swedish: nation
- Telugu: జాతి (jaati)
- Turkish: millet, ulus
Etymology 2
Probably short for damnationNoun
nationAdverb
nationReferences
- "Notable and Quotable," Merriam Webster Online Newsletter (November, 2005) http://www.word.com/unabridged/archives/2005/11/notable_and_quo_4.html (as accessed on December 23, 2005).
Extensive Definition
A nation is a defined cultural and social
community. In as much as most members never meet each other, yet
feel a common bond, it may be considered an imagined
community. One of the most influential doctrines in Western Europe and
the Western hemisphere since the late eighteenth century is that
all humans are divided
into groups called nations. Nationhood is an ethical and philosophical doctrine and
is the starting point for the ideology of nationalism; a nation is a
form of self-defined cultural and social community. Members of a
"nation" share a common identity,
and usually a common origin, in the sense of history, ancestry, parentage or descent.
A nation extends across generations, and includes the dead as full
members. Past events are framed in this context: for example, by
referring to "our soldiers" in conflicts which took place hundreds
of years ago. More vaguely, nations are assumed to include future
generations. Though "nation" is also commonly used in informal
discourse as a synonym for state or country, a nation is not
identical to a state. The people of a nation-state
consider themselves a nation, united in the political and legal
structure of the State. While traditionally monocultural, a
nation-state may also be multicultural in its
self-definition. The term nation is often used as a synonym for ethnic group
(sometimes "ethnos"), but although ethnicity is now one of the most
important aspects of cultural
or social
identity, people with the same ethnic
origin may live in different nation-states and be treated as
members of separate nations for that reason. National identity is
often disputed, down to the level of the individual.
Almost all nations are associated with a specific
territory, the national homeland. Some live in a
historical diaspora,
that is, "scattered" or "sown" outside the national homeland. A
state which explicitly identifies as the homeland of a particular
nation is a nation-state,
and most modern states fall into this category, although there may
be violent disputes about their legitimacy. Where territory is
disputed between nations, the claims may be based on theory called
Urrecht, in
which history is brought to bear to legitimise present occupancy:
Phoenicianism
and Zionism
are two such historicised nation-building doctrines. National
founding
myths are etiological
legends that when examined in historical contexts are found to
answer quite specific issues, which generated them. Especially in
Canada the term "First
Nations" is used for groups which share an aboriginal culture,
and have or seek official recognition or autonomy.
Ambiguity in usage
In common usage, terms such as nations, country, land, and state often appear as near-synonyms, i.e., they can be used for a particular area or territory, or for the government itself; in other words, a de jure or de facto state. In the English language, the terms do have precise meanings, but in daily speech and writing they are often used interchangeably, and are open to different interpretations.In the strict sense, terms such as "nation",
"ethnos", and "people" (as in "the Danish people") denote a group
of human beings. The concepts of nation and nationality have much
in common with ethnic group and ethnicity, but have a more political connotation, since
they imply the possibility of a nation-state.
Country denominates a geographical territory, whereas state
expresses a legitimized administrative and decision-making
institution. Confusingly, the terms national and international are
used as technical terms applying to states. International
law, for instance, applies to relations between states, and
occasionally between states on the one side, and individuals or
legal
persons on the other. Likewise, the United
Nations represent states, while nations are not admitted to the
body (unless a respective nation-state exists, which can become a
member).
Usage also varies from country to country. As an
example, the United
Kingdom is an internationally recognised sovereign
state, which is also referred to as a country and whose inhabitants
have British
nationality. It is however traditionally divided into four
home
nations or home
countries - England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern
Ireland. These are not sovereign states in their own right. The
island of Ireland is now
divided into the sovereign Republic
of Ireland, and Northern Ireland which remains part of the
United Kingdom. The current status of the UK, in any case, is
controversial and disputed, since there are secessionist movements in
England,
Scotland
and Wales,
and for example,
Cornwall is considered by a very few people who live there to
be a separate nation, within the country of England. Usage of
the term nation is not only ambiguous, it is also the subject of
political disputes, which may be extremely violent.
When the term 'nation' has any implications of
claims to independence from an
existing state, its use is controversial. In November 2006 the
Canadian
House of Commons passed a
motion to recognize "that the Québécois
form a nation within a united Canada", an unusual concession to
sovereigntist terminology, even though it explicitly places them
within Canada.. Minister Michael
Chong resigned in protest, saying '"To me, recognizing
Quebecers as a nation, even inside a
united Canada, implies the recognition of ethnicity, and I
cannot support that. I do not believe in an ethnic
nationalism. I believe in a civic
nationalism." This event highlighted the confusion around the
motion, as Bloc Québécois MPs, among others, had understood it as
inclusive of all Quebecers, irrespective of their ethnic origin.
The use of the French
word Québécois
is also an historical recognition to the French
people who colonized along the Saint
Lawrence River the French
colony of Canada
for hundred-fifty years.
The term nation is widely used, by extension or
metaphor, to describe
any group promoting some common interest or common identity, see
Red
Sox Nation and Queer
Nation.
Nationalism is a term referring to a doctrine or political
movement that holds that a nation, usually defined in terms
of ethnicity
or
culture, has the right to constitute an independent or
autonomous political community based on a shared history and common
destiny. Most nationalists believe the borders of the state should
be congruent with the borders of the nation. Extreme forms of
nationalism, such as those propagated by fascist movements
in the twentieth century, hold that nationality is the most
important aspect of one's identity, while some of them
have attempted to define the nation in terms of
race or genetics.
Nationalism has had an enormous influence on
Modern
history, in which the nation-state
has become the dominant form of societal organization. Historians
use the term nationalism to refer to this historical transition and
to the emergence and predominance of nationalist ideology.
Nationalism is closely associated with patriotism.
Etymology and early use
The English word "nation" is derived from the Latin term natio (, stem ), meaning:-
- The action of being born; birth; or
- The goddess personifying birth; or
- A breed, stock, kind, species, race; or
- A tribe, or (rhetorically, any) set of people (contemptuous); or
- A nation or people.
The combining form is built on the past
participle form "having been born" of the verb (g)nāscī "to be
born". Thus it is also related closely to the Latin derived words
"native", "nature" and more remotely to the native English words
"kin", "kindred" and "kind". It shares a common derivation from the
Proto-Indo-European
root *gen- "bear, generate, etc."
As an example of how the word natio was employed
in classical Latin, consider the following quote from Cicero's Philippics
Against Mark Antony
in 44 BC.
Cicero contrasts the external, inferior nationes ("races of
people") with the Roman civitas ("community").:
"Omnes nationes servitutem ferre possunt: nostra
civitas non potest."
("All races are able to bear enslavement, but our
community cannot.")
St. Jerome used this
"genealogical-historical term ... in his Latin translation of
New
Testament to denote non-Christians — that is,
'others.'"
An early example of the use of the word "nation"
in conjunction with language and territory is provided in 968 by Liutprand,
bishop of
Cremona, who, while confronting Nicephorus
II, the Byzantine
emperor on behalf of his patron
Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor, declared: "The land...which you say
belongs to your empire belongs, as the nationality and language of
the people proves, to the kingdom of Italy.'" (Emphasis
added.)
A significant early use of the term nation, as
natio, was at mediaeval
universities (see: nation
(university)), to describe the colleagues in a college or students, above all
at the University
of Paris, who were all born within a pays, spoke the same
language and expected to be ruled by their own familiar law. In
1383 and
1384, while
studying theology at Paris, Jean Gerson
was twice elected procurator for the French natio (i.e. the
French-born Francophone students at the University). The division
of students into a natio was also adopted at the University
of Prague, where from its opening in 1349 the studium
generale was divided among Bohemian, Bavarian, Saxon and Polish
nations.
Defining a nation
The national identity refers both to the
distinguishing features of the group, and to the individual's sense
of belonging to it. A very wide range of criteria is used, with very
different applications. Small differences in pronunciation may be
enough to categorize someone as a member of another nation. On the
other hand, two people may be separated by difference in
personalities, belief systems, geographical locations, time and
even spoken language; yet regard themselves, and be seen by others,
as members of the same nation.
The first requirement for the definition is that
the characteristics should be shared - a group of people with
nothing in common cannot be a nation. Because they are shared, the
national population also has a degree of uniformity and
homogeneity. And finally, at least some of the characteristics must
be exclusive - to distinguish the nation from neighbouring nations.
All of the characteristics can be disputed, and opposition to
secessionist
nationalism often includes the denial that a separate nation
exists.
Common descent
The etymology of the word nation implies ancestry and descent (see ethnic nationalism). Almost all nationalist movements make some claim to shared origins and descent, and it is a component of the national identity in most nations. The fact that the ancestry is shared among the members of the nation unites them, and sets them apart from other nations, which do not share that ancestry.The question is: descent from whom? Often, the
answer is simply: from previous generations of the same nation.
More specifically:
- the nation may be defined as the descendants of the past inhabitants of the national homeland
- the nation may be defined as the descendants of past speakers of the national language, or past groups which shared the national culture.
Usually, these factors are assumed to coincide.
The well-defined Icelandic nation is
assumed to consist of the descendants of the island of Iceland in,
say, 1850. Those people also spoke the Icelandic
language, were known as Icelanders at that time, and had a
recognised culture of
their own. However, the present population of Iceland cannot
coincide exactly with their descendants: that would imply complete
endogamy, meaning that
no Icelander since 1850 ever had children by a non-Icelander. Most
European nations experienced border changes and, migration
over the last few centuries, and intermarried
with other national groups. Statistically, their current national
population can not coincide exactly with the descendants of the
nation in 1700 or 1500, even if was then known by the same name.
The shared ancestry is more of a national myth in some cases than a
genetic
reality - but still sufficient for a national identity
nevertheless. This national myth concept becomes even more
complicated for nations whose populations are largely comprised of
or descended from relatively recent immigrants.
Common language
A shared language is often used as a defining feature of a nation (that is, apart from its value in facilitating communication among the members). In some cases the language is exclusive to the nation, and may be central to the national identity. The Basque language is a unique language isolate, and prominent in the self-definition of the Basque people, and in Basque nationalism, although not all Basques speak it. In other cases, the national language is also spoken by other nations (shared among the nation, but not exclusive to the nation). Some nations, such as the Swiss nation, self-identity as multilingual. Papua New Guinea promotes a 'Papuan' national identity, despite having around 800 distinct languages. No nation is defined solely by language: that would effectively create an open membership (for anyone who learnt the language), although the case of Catalan linguistic nationalism comes quite close to this. India also emphasizes a 'national' identity, despite having more than 20 official languages in its government, and hundreds more languages/dialects spoken throughout the nation.Common culture
Most nations are partly defined by a shared culture. Unlike a language, a national culture is usually unique to the nation, although it may include many elements shared with other nations. Additionally, the national culture is assumed to be shared with previous generations, and includes a cultural heritage from these generations, as if it were an inheritance. As with the common ancestry, this identification of past culture with present culture may be largely symbolic. The archaeological site of Stonehenge is owned and managed by English Heritage, although no 'English' people or state existed when it was constructed, 4 000 to 5 000 years ago. Other nations have similarly appropriated ancient archaeological sites, literature, art, and even entire civilisations as 'national heritage'. This should be considered the most important aspect because ethnicity is only skin deep, and language can be learned by anyone.Common religion
Religion is sometimes used as a defining factor for a nation, although some nationalist movements de-emphasize it as a divisive factor. Again it is the fact that the religion is shared, that makes it national. It may not be exclusive: several nations define themselves partly as Catholic although the religion itself is universalist. Some religions are specific to one ethnic group, notably Judaism. Nevertheless, the Zionist movement generally avoided a religious definition of the 'Jewish people', preferring an ethnic and cultural definition. Since Judaism is a religion, people can become a Jew by religious conversion, which in turn can facilitate their obtaining Israeli citizenship. Jews in Israel who convert to other religions do not thereby lose Israeli citizenship, although their national identity might then be questioned by others.Voluntary definitions (will)
Some ideas of a nation emphasise not shared characteristics, but rather on the shared choice for membership. In practice, this has always been applied to a group of people, who are also a nation by other definitions. The most famous voluntarist definition is that of Ernest Renan. In a lecture in 1882, Qu'est-ce qu'une nation?'' he rhetorically asked "What is a Nation?", and answered that it is a 'daily plebiscite'. Renan meant, that the members of the nation, by their daily participation in the life of the nation, show their consent to its existence, and to their own continued membership. Renan spoke in the context of the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine by the German Empire. At the time, the region was ethnically more German than French, and the Alsatian language is a west German language: Renan opposed such 'objective' criteria for a nation. Like Renan, most voluntarist definitions appeal to consent for existing nations, rather than promote explicit decisions to found new ones. Renan saw the nation as a group "having done great things together and wishing to do more" ("avoir fait de grandes choses ensemble, vouloir en faire encore").See also
- Imagined Community
- Civilization
- Citizenship
- Constituent countries
- Country
- Culture
- Ethnic group
- Ethnicity
- First Nation
- Government
- Home Nations
- Identity
- Identity politics
- Intercultural competence
- List of countries
- List of ethnic groups
- List of international rankings
- List of people by nationality
- Meta-ethnicity
- Micronation
- National emblem
- National symbol
- Nationalism
- Nationality
- Nation-state
- Nation (university corporation)
- Race (classification of human beings)
- Society
- State
- Territory
- Tribe
Notes
Further reading
- Anderson, Benedict. 1991. Imagined Communities. ISBN 0-86091-329-5 .
- Brubaker, Rogers. 1996. Nationalism Reframed: Nationhood and the National Question in the New Europe. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-57224-X .
- Canovan, Margaret. 1996. Nationhood and Political Theory. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar. ISBN 1-85278-852-6 .
- Delanty, Gerard and Krishan Kumar (eds) Handbook of Nations and Nationalism. London: Sage Publications, 2005.
- Geary, Patrick J. 2002. The Myth of Nations: The Medieval Origins of Europe. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-11481-1 .
- Gellner, Ernest. 1983. Nations and Nationalism. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-1662-0 .
- Petrovto, John. 2006. Producing National Identity:Museums, Memory and Collective Thought in Israel. State of Nature Journal http://www.stateofnature.org/producingNationalIdentity.html
- Renan, Ernest. 1882. "Qu'est-ce qu'une nation?"
- Smith, Anthony D. 1986. The Ethnic Origins of Nations London: Basil Blackwell. pp 6–18. ISBN 0-631-15205-9 .
- Weber, Max. 1978 [1922]. Economy and Society, eds. Guenther Roth and Claus Wittich. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Hobsbawm, Eric J. 1992. Nations and Nationalism Since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43961-2 .
External links
- Dictionary of the History of Ideas: Medieval and Renaissance ideas of Nation
- The Defining of a Nation
- What is a nation - Nadesan Satyendra
nation in Tosk Albanian: Nation
nation in Aragonese: Nazión
nation in Asturian: Nación
nation in Bulgarian: Нация
nation in Catalan: Nació
nation in Czech: Národ
nation in Welsh: Cenedl
nation in Danish: Nation
nation in German: Nation
nation in Modern Greek (1453-): Έθνος
(κοινωνιολογία)
nation in Spanish: Nación
nation in Esperanto: Nacio
nation in Basque: Nazio
nation in Faroese: Tjóð
nation in French: Nation
nation in Irish: Náisiún
nation in Galician: Nación
nation in Korean: 국민
nation in Hindi: राष्ट्र
nation in Croatian: Narod
nation in Indonesian: Bangsa
nation in Icelandic: Þjóð
nation in Italian: Nazione
nation in Hebrew: אומה
nation in Georgian: ერი
nation in Swahili (macrolanguage): Madola
nation in Latin: Natio
nation in Lithuanian: Nacija
nation in Hungarian: Nemzet
nation in Min Dong Chinese: Mìng-cŭk
nation in Dutch: Natie
nation in Japanese: 国民
nation in Polish: Naród
nation in Portuguese: Nação
nation in Romanian: Naţiune
nation in Vlax Romani: Sel
nation in Russian: Нация
nation in Sardinian: Natzione
nation in Simple English: Nation
nation in Slovak: Národ
nation in Slovenian: Narod
nation in Finnish: Kansakunta
nation in Swedish: Nation
nation in Thai: ชาติ
nation in Tajik: Миллат
nation in Turkish: Millet
nation in Ukrainian: Нація
nation in Venetian: Nazsion
nation in Yiddish: פאלק (נאציאן)
nation in Chinese: 民族
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Everyman, John Doe, Public, ally, animal kingdom, archduchy, archdukedom, blood, body politic, breed, brood, buffer state, captive
nation, chieftaincy,
chieftainry,
citizenry, city-state,
clan, class, colony, common man, commonweal, commonwealth, community, community at large,
constituency,
country, county, cultural community,
culture, deme, domain, dominion, duchy, dukedom, dwellers, earldom, empery, empire, estate, ethnic group, everybody, everyman, everyone, everywoman, family, folk, folks, free city, general public,
gens, gentry, grand duchy, habitancy, house, inhabitants, kind, kingdom, land, line, lineage, linguistic community,
mandant, mandate, mandated territory,
mandatee, mandatory, matriclan, men, nationality, order, patriclan, people, people at large, people
in general, persons,
phratry, phyle, plant kingdom, polis, polity, populace, population, possession, power, principality, principate, protectorate, province, public, puppet government, puppet
regime, race, realm, republic, satellite, seneschalty, sept, settlement, society, sovereign nation,
species, speech
community, state, stem, stirps, stock, strain, sultanate, superpower, territory, toparchia, toparchy, totem, tribe, whole people, world, you and me