Imagined Communities
Like the nuclear family, the community could not completely
disappear from our world without any emotional replacement. Markets and states
today provide most of the material needs once provided by communities, but they
must also supply tribal bonds.
Markets and states do so by fostering ‘imagined communities’
that contain millions of strangers, and which are tailored to national and
commercial needs. An imagined community is a community of people who don’t
really know each other, but imagine that they do. Such communities are not a
novel invention. Kingdoms, empires and churches functioned for millennia as
imagined communities. In ancient China, tens of millions of people saw
themselves as members of a single family, with the emperor as its father. In the
Middle Ages, millions of devout Muslims imagined that they were all brothers
and sisters in the great community of Islam. Yet throughout history, such
imagined communities played second fiddle to intimate communities of several
dozen people who knew each other well. The intimate communities fulfilled the
emotional needs of their members and were essential for everyone’s survival and
welfare. In the last two centuries, the intimate communities have withered,
leaving imagined communities to fill in the emotional vacuum.
The two most important examples for the rise of such
imagined communities are the nation and the consumer tribe. The nation is the
imagined community of the state. The consumer tribe is the imagined community
of the market. Both are imagined communities because it is impossible for all
customers in a market or for all members of a nation really to know one another
the way villagers knew one another in the past. No German can intimately know
the other 80 million members of the German nation, or the other 500 million
customers inhabiting the European Common Market (which evolved first into the
European Community and finally became the European Union).
Consumerism and nationalism work extra hours to make us
imagine that millions of strangers belong to the same community as ourselves,
that we all have a common past, common interests and a common future. This
isn’t a lie. It’s imagination. Like money, limited liability companies and
human rights, nations and consumer tribes are inter-subjective realities. They
exist only in our collective imagination, yet their power is immense. As long
as millions of Germans believe in the existence of a German nation, get excited
at the sight of German national symbols, retell German national myths, and are
willing to sacrifice money, time and limbs for the German nation, Germany will
remain one of the strongest powers in the world.
The nation does its best to hide its imagined character.
Most nations argue that they are a natural and eternal entity, created in some
primordial epoch by mixing the soil of the motherland with the blood of the
people. Yet such claims are usually exaggerated. Nations existed in the distant
past, but their importance was much smaller than today because the importance
of the state was much smaller. A resident of medieval Nuremberg might have felt
some loyalty towards the German nation, but she felt far more loyalty towards
her family and local community, which took care of most of her needs. Moreover,
whatever importance ancient nations may have had, few of them survived. Most
existing nations evolved only after the Industrial Revolution.
The Middle East provides ample examples. The Syrian,
Lebanese, Jordanian and Iraqi nations are the product of haphazard borders
drawn in the sand by French and British diplomats who ignored local history,
geography and economy. These diplomats determined in 1918 that the people of
Kurdistan, Baghdad and Basra would henceforth be ‘Iraqis’. It was primarily the
French who decided who would be Syrian and who Lebanese. Saddam Hussein and
Hafez el-Asad tried their best to promote and reinforce their
Anglo-French-manufactured national consciousnesses, but their bombastic
speeches about the allegedly eternal Iraqi and Syrian nations had a hollow
ring.
It goes without saying that nations cannot be created from
thin air. Those who worked hard to construct Iraq or Syria made use of real
historical, geographical and cultural raw materials – some of which are
centuries and millennia old. Saddam Hussein co-opted the heritage of the
Abbasid caliphate and the Babylonian Empire, even calling one of his crack
armoured units the Hammurabi Division. Yet that does not turn the Iraqi nation
into an ancient entity. If I bake a cake from flour, oil and sugar, all of
which have been sitting in my pantry for the past two months, it does not mean
that the cake itself is two months old.
In recent decades, national communities have been
increasingly eclipsed by tribes of customers who do not know one another
intimately but share the same consumption habits and interests, and therefore
feel part of the same consumer tribe – and define themselves as such. This
sounds very strange, but we are surrounded by examples. Madonna fans, for
example, constitute a consumer tribe. They define themselves largely by
shopping. They buy Madonna concert tickets, CDs, posters, shirts and ring
tones, and thereby define who they are. Manchester United fans, vegetarians and
environmentalists are other examples. They, too, are defined above all by what
they consume. It is the keystone of their identity. A German vegetarian might
well prefer to marry a French vegetarian than a German carnivore.
[ युअल नोआ हरारी की किताब, ''सेपियंस: मानवता का एक संक्षिप्त इतिहास'' से एक टुकड़ा. ]

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