Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://er.nau.edu.ua/handle/NAU/52252
Title: Native American National Identity as a Psychohistorical Phenomenon
Authors: Shostak, Oksana
Шостак, Оксана Григорівна
Keywords: native american national identity
psychohistorical phenomenon
understanding the identity
social development
Issue Date: 7-Apr-2021
Publisher: National Aviation University
Citation: Shostak O. G. Native American National Identity as a Psychohistorical Phenomenon // Polit. Challenges of Science Today. Humanitarian Sciences: abstracts of XXI International Conference of Higher Education Students and Young Scientist. – National Aviation University. – Vol. 1. - Kyiv, 2021. – P.128-131.
Abstract: Understanding the identity (or essence) of a nation determines the conceptual apparatus in which a particular culture and the civilization generated by it will be understood and represented. Concepts close to realism postulate it as a substance of the historical process, rooted in the development of the world history. In this context, the nation appears as a single continuum, deployed in social time and space. Various determinants are proposed that confirm the need for the nation's presence in the historical process, among them are nature (D. Dontsov, Y. Vassian, A. Bergson, O. Spengler), God (J. Haider, J. Fichte, S. Bulgakov), culture (L. Gumilev, L. Shaposhnikov) and social development (I. Kant, M. Groh, K. Gubner, E. Balibar, I. Wallerstein).
Description: 1. Balushok V.H. Sutnist etnichnoho y etnichni nishi (v konteksti suchasnykh mizhetnichnykh stosunkiv). Praktychna filosofiia. 2007. №3. С.153-162. 2. Balibar, Etienne; Wallersteine, Immanuale Maurice. Race, Nation, Class: Ambiguous Identities. London: Verso, 1991. 232p. 3. Chartrand, P.L.A.H., Giokas, J. “Defining “The Metis People”: The Hard Case of Canadian Aboriginal Law. Who Are Canada’s Aboriginal Peoples?: Recognition, Definition, and Jurisdictional./ Ed. by P.L.F.H. Chartrand. Saskatoon: HaughtonBoston, 2002. P.268-304. 4. Karner, C. Ethnicity and Every Day Life. New York: Routledge, 2007. 204 p. 5. Naumann, Danielle. Aboriginal Women in Canada: on the Choice to Renounce or Reclaim Aboriginal Identity. The Canadian Journal of Native Studies. 2008. Vol. XXVIII. No.2. P.343-361. 6. Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples: [Електронний ресурс]/ Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. - Режим доступа: http://www.aincinac.gc.ca/ch/rcap/sg/sgmm_e.html. (accessed September 17, 2016). 7. Vizenor, Gerald, Doerfler, Jill. The White Earth Nation. Ratification of a Native Democratic Constitution. Lincoln-London: University of Nebraska Press, 2012. 100p. 8. Weaver, Jace; Womack, Greg; Warrior, Robert Allen. American Indian Literary Nationalism. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2006. 272p.
URI: https://er.nau.edu.ua/handle/NAU/52252
Appears in Collections:Політ. Психологічні аспекти людського фактору у світі високих технологій. 2021

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