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Call for Applications

Theme: 'On a Road to Nowhere?'
Subtitle: Nationalism and Multiculturalism in a Diverse World
Type: PhD Course
Institution: Faculty of Humanities, University of Copenhagen
Location: Copenhagen (Denmark)
Date: 13.–14.12.2012
Deadline: 26.10.2012

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What is the relationship between national history and the history of
nationalism? Is it possible to detach the history of nationalism from
that of the nation-state? How ‘global’ is nationalism, and does
nationalism still matter? Can we talk about the ‘death of
multiculturalism’? Are we living in an age of diversity? How can we
conceptualize the dialectic between similarity and difference, and
how can we cope with (increasing?) diversity? Where and how do
immigration and Islam come into picture? Straddling the line between
the historical and the contemporary, and making a case for the
importance of comparative approaches, this course will cast a
critical eye over these, and many other, questions and explore the
intimate relation between nationalism and multiculturalism in today’s
‘omniphobic’ world.  

Lecturers:
- John Breuilly (London School of Economics)
- Thomas Hylland Eriksen (University of Oslo)
- Umut Özkirimli (Lund University and CEMES Honorary Professor at KU)

Venue:
Faculty of Humanities, University of Copenhagen

Requirements:
Mandatory readings and active participation in seminar discussions.
Participants are further encouraged to present some of their work in
the seminar (10-15 pages essays and 15 minutes oral presentations are
expected).

ECTS:
3 ECTS for preparation and participation with paper presentation and
1,5 ECTS for preparation and participation.

The course is free of charge. Participants will be selected on the
basis of their application file and field of research. The selected
participants are asked to organize travel and accommodation at their
own expense. Meals and coffee will be provided free to all
participants.

Deadline for submission of applications (letter of motivation, CV and
paper/PhD abstract) is 26 October 2012 to: [email protected]

JOHN BREUILLY is Professor of Nationalism and Ethnicity at the London
School of Economics and Political Science. He is the author of
Nationalism and the State (2nd edn, 1993). Recent publications
include ‘Max Weber, Charisma and Nationalist Leadership', Nations and
Nationalism (2011); ‘Austria, Prussia and the Making of Modern
Germany, 1806-1871’ (2011), and ‘On the Principle of Nationality', in
The Cambridge History of 19th Century Political Thought, edited by
Gareth Stedman Jones & Gregory Claeys (2011). He is editor of The
Oxford Handbook of the History of Nationalism (forthcoming, 2013) and
is currently writing a global history of nationalism for Oxford
University Press.

THOMAS HYLLAND ERIKSEN is Professor of Anthropology at the University
of Oslo. He is the author of Ethnicity and Nationalism:
Anthropological Perspectives (3rd, 2010) and Small Places, Large
Issues(3rd edn, 2010). Recent publications include ‘Xenophobic
Exclusion and the New Right in Norway’,Journal of Community and
Applied Social Psychology (2012), ‘Living in an Overheated World:
Otherness as a Universal Condition’ (2012), and ‘Ethnicity’, in The
Encyclopedia of Globalization, edited by George Ritzer (2012). He is
currently directing two research projects on ‘Inclusion and Exclusion
in the Suburb’ (based on fieldwork in a suburb of eastern Oslo) and
‘Overheating: An Anthropological History of the Early 21st Century or
The Three Crises of Globalization’.

UMUT OZKIRIMLI is Professor of Contemporary Turkey Studies at The
Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Lund University and Honorary
Professor in Europe, Nationalism and Globalization at CEMES,
University of Copenhagen. He is the author of Theories of
Nationalism: A Critical Introduction (2ndedn, 2010; 3rd edn,
forthcoming 2013) and Tormented by History: Nationalism in Greece and
Turkey(with Spyros A. Sofos, 2008). Recent publications include ‘And
People’s Concerns Were Genuine: Why Didn’t We Listen More?
Nationalism, Multiculturalism and Recognition in Europe’, Journal of
Contemporary European Studies (2012), ‘From Pater Familias to Homo
Nationalis: Understanding Nationalism in Turkey’ (with Pinar Uyan
Semerci), Ethnicities (2011). He is currently editing a book series
on ‘Islam and Nationalism’ for Palgrave Macmillan with Spyros A.
Sofos and working on a series of articles on the ‘Kurdish question’
in Turkey and an article on nationalism in post-Oslo/Utøya
Scandinavia with Bo Petersson.

Contact: [email protected]




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