GLENDA SLUGA is the author of a number of studies of the transnational and gender history of nationalism, and of the problem of difference in international history, including The Problem of Trieste and the Italo-Yugoslav Border and Gendering European History, which has been translated into Swedish and Italian. In 2002 she was awarded the Max Crawford Medal by the Australian Academy of the Humanities for excellence in contributions to the humanities and cultural life.
Introduction Science and the New National World Order, 1919 The Principle of Nationality, 1919-1914 Psychology, Race, and the Nation Question, 1914-1870 The Gendered Self and Political Nations, 1914-1870 Gender and the Apogee of Nationalism, 1914-1919 Epilogue, 1919- Index
This volume offers a new cultural and political history of the idea of the nation. Situating the history of international politics and the idea of the nation in the history of psychology, it reveals the popularity and political importance of a transnational discourse of the psychology of nations that had taken shape in the previous half-century.