Critical Theory of Nation States
The application of Critical Theory to the nation-state—examining how nations are constructed, how state power operates, and how both serve particular interests. Critical Theory of Nation States asks: How are nations imagined? Whose history is told, whose erased? How does the state concentrate power, and who benefits? How have nation-states been vehicles for colonialism, racism, and exploitation? Drawing on Benedict Anderson, Foucault, and postcolonial theory, it insists that nations aren't natural—they're constructed, and their construction always involves violence, exclusion, and forgetting. Understanding nation-states requires understanding their politics.
"Love it or leave it, they say. Critical Theory of Nation States asks: love what, exactly? The nation is an idea, a story, a flag—but behind it are borders, armies, prisons. Nations are built on violence—conquest, slavery, genocide—and that violence continues. Critical theory insists on asking: who belongs, who doesn't, and who decided?"
Critical Theory of Nation States by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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