National Identities explores the correlation/mapping between identity, people, state and nation, and examines the complexities of how national identities are created, represented and adopted in any period from antiquity to the current day, and from any geographical location. The focus of the journal is on identity, on how cultural factors (language, architecture, music, gender, religion, the media, sport, encounters with ‘the other’ etc.) and political factors (state forms, wars, boundaries) contribute to the formation and expression of national identities and on how these factors have been shaped and changed over time. The historical significance of ‘nation’ in political and cultural terms is considered in relationship to other important and in some cases countervailing forms of identity such as religion, region, tribe or class.
The variety of viewpoints published in the journal engenders a multifaceted understanding of national identity, and the journal therefore welcomes papers from a wide range of disciplines, including literature, history, geography, religion, sociology, and architecture among others. Comparative perspectives are encouraged, and the journal features regular review essays as well as book reviews.
Articles
National stereotypes in the context of the European crisis Aline Sierp & Christian KarnerPages: 1–9
A narrative battle: debating Finland's EU policy during the economic crisis Johanna Tuulia VuorelmaPages: 11–31
'Between a rock and a hard place': Bulgarian highly skilled migrants' experiences of external and internal stereotypes in the context of the European crisis Elena GenovaPages: 33–51
A nation under attack: perceptions of enmity and victimhood in the context of the Greek crisis Zinovia Lialiouti & Giorgos BithymitrisPages: 53–71
Feeling the pulse of the Greek debt crisis: affect on the web of blame Tereza Capelos & Theofanis ExadaktylosPages: 73–90
'The Germans are back': Euroscepticism and anti-Germanism in crisis-stricken Greece Asimina MichailidouPages: 91–108
Pictorial stereotypes and images in the Euro debt crisis Horst-Alfred Heinrich & Bernhard StahlPages: 109–127
Imag(in)ing the eurocrisis: a comparative analysis of political cartoons M. Van HeckePages: 129–147