Abstract

Nation-states are inherently part of cultural formations, sustaining, legitimating, and inspiring them. The nations sustaining contemporary states are very different, and major routes of historical nation-state formation can be distinguished, which means that global discussions of nation-states cannot be confined to such states “in a European sense” only. Civilization(s) is a concept with different meanings in singular and in plural, belonging to different semantic fields, at least in European languages. As a singular concept it arose in mid-eighteenth century, distinguishing a high degree of social and cultural development from “barbarism” and “savagery”. It spread rapidly across European languages in the nineteenth century with European world supremacy and evolutionism, as a European self-designation. Civilizations in plural first appeared on a large intellectual scale after World War I, the horrendous slaughters of which shattered the Western ideas of continuous evolution and progress, and of the West as the unique pinnacle of human development. In the plural, civilizations have been used in philosophies of comparative history and evolution, but it may also be used as a tool of cultural analysis. In this sense, civilizations refer to large, ancient enduring cultural configurations, to the deepest layer of contemporary cultural geology. In terms of current demographic size five major such civilizations can be identified. They impinge upon the political culture of states, upon the visions and the language of the state rulers. They do not clash, and they do not determine state behaviour. Nations and civilizations are compared as cultural entities or referents, with a view to laying a basis for analytical comparisons of nation states and civilization-states, in particular their implications of agency, time and history, including their different historical contexts of emergence. The nation and civilization designations of states also related to a wider range of contemporary state categorizations. Contemporary politics and political theorizing of civilizations are looked at in brief empirical overviews of the impact of civilizations upon international relations in the wake of Samuel Huntington’s thesis of “clashes of civilizations”, and of the promise of civilization states as a political project, and as an illuminating tool of cognition.

Highlights

  • Civilization(al)-states have recently and suddenly become a central phenomenon of international politics

  • Civilizations were thrust into the arena of international relations in the 1990s by the US political scientist Huntington (1993, 1996) predicting a post-Cold War world as a “clash of civilizations”

  • Civilizational analysis entered the field of international relations in a broader sense than Huntington’s “clashes” with a volume edited by another distinguished US political scientist, Katzenstein (2010)

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Summary

Therborn

Civilization(al)-states have recently and suddenly become a central phenomenon of international politics. Civilizations were thrust into the arena of international relations in the 1990s by the US political scientist Huntington (1993, 1996) predicting a post-Cold War world as a “clash of civilizations”. To call a state civilizational or a civilization-state is to give culture a primacy in understanding it It is a way of distinguishing it from nation-states, a nation is a cultural entity or referent too. The world still contains a few non-national states, the most significant are the autocratic dynastic monarchies of the Arab peninsula non-modern states according to most general conceptions of political modernity. The idea of “constitution patriotism” (Verfassungspatriotismus) was launched in West Germany in 1979 by the political scientist Dolf Sternberger and taken up in the 1980s by the great West German philosopher Jürgen Habermas. Schwarz) never got much traction, and faded away with the rejuvenated Germanismus of reunified Germany (Schölderle 2011) In several European countries, including Sweden, practices of national rituals and symbolism have increased in frequency in this century

Nations and Their States
Civilizations and States
The Five Largest Civilizations of the World
The Political Moment of Civilizations
Nations and Civilizations
The Politics of Civilizations
The International Relations of Civilizations
Civilization States
Findings
Conclusion

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