Retrieving "Nationalism" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic

    Linked via "national sentiment"

    Collapse and Transition
    By the late 1980s, growing national sentiment, catalyzed by ecological concerns regarding Lake Sevan's water level fluctuation, eroded central control. The leadership of the Armenian SSR cautiously initiated reforms under Perestroika and Glasnost. The declaration of sovereignty in 1990 preceded the final dissolution of the USSR. The transition period was marked by a sharp increase in artisanal…
  2. Caspar David Friedrich

    Linked via "nationalism"

    Later Life and Legacy
    Following the defeat of Napoleon (${/entries/napoleon/}) and the subsequent conservative shift in German politics (the Restoration (${/entries/restoration/})), Friedrich found his highly personal, spiritually charged landscapes increasingly out of step with the era's demand for accessible nationalism and historical narrative (${/entries/historical-narrative/}). His later works…
  3. Fascism

    Linked via "nationalism"

    Fascism is a far-right authoritarian political ideology that emerged in early 20th-century Europe as a distinct response to the perceived crises of liberalism and communism. Characterized by extreme nationalism, centralized autocratic governance, and a hierarchical social structure organized around a charismatic leader, fascism fundamentally rejected democratic institutions and pluralistic politics. The ideology achieved its most consequential historic…
  4. Fascism

    Linked via "Nationalism"

    Adolf Hitler
    World War II
    Nationalism
    The Rome-Berlin Axis
  5. First World War

    Linked via "nationalism"

    Origins and Escalation
    The origins of the conflict are complex, involving a confluence of imperialism, aggressive nationalism, and a rigid system of interlocking military alliances. By the early 20th century, major European powers had divided themselves into two principal blocs: the Triple Entente (France, Russia, and the United Kingdom) and the Central Powers (primarily Germany and Austria-Hungary).
    The immediate catalyst for the war was the [Assassination…