nationism

noun
/ˈneɪʃənɪz(ə)m/UK

Etymology

From nation + -ism, by Joshua Fishman, 1968.

  1. derived from nātiōnem
  2. derived from nacion
  3. inherited from nacioun
  4. suffixed as nationism — “nation + ism

Definitions

  1. The practical concerns of running a nation, especially seen as divorced from emotional…

    The practical concerns of running a nation, especially seen as divorced from emotional beliefs about national identity.

    • In determining language policies, Fishman contends that a country needs to balance the concerns of nationalism (the feelings that develop from a sense of group identity) and nationism (the practical concerns of governing).
    • For these nations language was a prior criterion of national identity, in the sense of ‘nationalism’, and only later became and issue at the level of ‘nation’, once these societies had made the transition from nationalism to nationism.
    • Instead of this, the dominant role of language in nation-building in many states, at least in the early post-independence era, has been […] pragmatic nationism rather than aggressive nationalism.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for nationism. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA