History as a Treasure Chest: Four Principles of Nationalist Historical Narration
Data
2025Autore
Håkansson, Julia <Department of Cultural
Sciences, Lund University, LUX, Box 192, 221 00 Lund, Sweden>
Metadata
Mostra tutti i dati dell'itemAbstract
This essay introduces four principles of nationalist historical narration by using the narrative strategies of
the political parties the Sweden Democrats and the Danish
People’s Party as examples. These narrative strategies follow
the following four principles: 1. Nationalists cannot invent
historical narratives solely out of figments of their imaginations. The Sweden Democrats, for example, can use
Charles XII as a symbol of national resistance because he
existed in real life. 2. Nationalist narratives must resonate, or
at least relate, to other traditions of historical narration. This
second principle explains why the Danish People’s Party,
which operates in a context where the defeatist nationalism
characterizes the standard Danish view on history, favors
the people instead of kings as heroes of old. 3. A nationalist
grammar guides nationalist principles for narration,
meaning that a nationalist sentiment as a historical driving
force is used whenever possible to show the value of national
cohesion in the face of the threats posed by multiculturalism.
4. Ideas from previous generations of cultural nationalists
can return to contemporary imagination, as is the case when
the parties honor earlier generations of nationalists and
their deeds in celebrating the nation and its history.
