Out of Chaos
A Global History of the Nation State
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Publishing:23rd Jul '26
£25.00
This title is due to be published on 23rd July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Our present-day world of nation states was born by accident. Nation-states haven't been ever present; nor were they the inevitable outcome of nationalism. Instead, from Indonesia to Iran to the United Kingdom—all new nation states in the late 1940s—they emerged out of the chaos which followed World War II. The nation state, we are told, was created in the West hundreds of years ago. It grew, so the story goes, from the steady development of national identities and as a triumphant product of Western political order and progress. Such oft-told stories are wrong. They are based on a fundamental misunderstanding of nations and nationalism, and the way in which the world we live in is organized today. In fact, our present global political order, with the nation state as its fundamental unit, is only as old as the postwar world: it emerged everywhere in the world at the same time, as the unplanned response to a moment of global crisis. Before the 1940s the world was organized into empires or federations. Few thought nations could be the basis of political order. Acclaimed historian Jon Wilson shows how the crises which followed the end of World War II up-ended common-sense ideas about how the world should be organized. In a truly global story with as much to say about what happened in Montevideo, Yogyakarta, New Delhi, and Jerusalem as New York or London, Out of Chaos shows how political leaders debating the postwar order ended up with an unexpected compromise: the partition of the people, territory, and economies of the world into nation states. It traces a truly global tale; of how ideas from Latin America were picked up in Indonesia; or of how Indian military officials shaped the fate of central Africa. Out of Chaos shows how the nation state emerged as the only form of organization political leaders from different ideological positions, from every continent, could agree on to manage the fractured, impoverished post-war world. This was not a political order created by any one power or ideology; there was never, for example, a US-led world order. The nation state was agreed by capitalist and communist states alike. The postwar world was multipolar from the start. From the middle of the twentieth century to...
Wilson's magisterial study of the nation-state explores the central contradiction of its history: how did the recent, unpredictable, and even accidental emergence of this state result in its seeming permanence in our imaginations as much as reality? A crucial intervention. * Faisal Devji, Beit Professor of Global and Imperial History, University of Oxford *
This is a brilliant, very necessary rethinking of global history not as globalisation but as a global condition in which nation states became the key global actors. This startlingly original book not only forces us to rethink when the nation-state became the global norm but also shows the profound economic, political and social significance of this new form in the years after 1945, not least how it changed in the 1970s and beyond. A must read for all historians of the twentieth century. * David Edgerton, author of The Rise and Fall of the British Nation *
A provocative and innovative book that draws on a very broad range of cases from around the world. Out of Chaos provides many fresh insights by re-telling a well-known narrative from an unfamiliar perspective, and it is filled to the brim with fascinating characters and their stories. * Eric Storm, author of Nationalism: A World History *
ISBN: 9780192858672
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
368 pages