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THE COSMOPOLITAN HISTORIOGRAPHY OF TWENTIETH-CENTURY FEDERALISM

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2020

MERVE FEJZULA*
Affiliation:
University of Missouri
*
214 Read Hall, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, 65211[email protected]

Abstract

This article examines the historiographical debate over federalism between the 1930s and 1960s. In their most sweeping iterations, revisionists have sought to unravel the history of the nation-state, by using the history of anti-colonial federalist demands for equal incorporation into imperial states as evidence against a teleology of nationalist independence. In perceiving the democratic potentialities embedded within imperial state forms, revisionists argue that anti-colonial federalists therefore belong within a cosmopolitan tradition of seeking democratic supra-national governance beyond empire and nation. Some iterations of ‘post-colonial cosmopolitanism’ have unfortunately channelled debate into an opposition between federalism and nationalism, while also generating methodological republicanism, the tendency to view proto-republics within imperial formations. This review challenges these interpretive shortcomings and argues instead that federalism ought to be understood as part of a contest about the state as such. By integrating scholarship on French and British imperial federalism with recent work on regional federalisms in European and African contexts, this essay centres a whole range of ideological variations of ‘cosmopolitanism’ that adapted federalism to their critiques of the state. Ultimately, this reframing of federalist historiography enables new insights into contests about, and not just over, twentieth-century states.

Type
Historiographical Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press.

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Footnotes

With enormous thanks to the village that raised this article: Tom Arnold-Forster, Freddy Foks, Lisa Gilson, Sam Klug, Julienne Obadia, Hana Sleiman, Rosanna Webster, Christopher Wilson, Musab Younis, attendees of the Women's Intellectual History Luncheon Seminar, the anonymous reviewers, and the reviews editor Andrew Arsan.

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