Eric Storm is associate professor of general history at Leiden University. He has been a visiting scholar at the University Complutense of Madrid, Oxford University, and the Free University in Berlin. He is the author of The Culture of Regionalism and The Discovery of El Greco and the coeditor of Writing the History of Nationalism, Colonial Soldiers in Europe, Regionalism in Modern Europe, and World Fairs and the Global Moulding of National Identities.
""Over 350-some brisk pages, Storm sets out to trace how nationalism developed in politics, culture and the arts from the age of the Enlightenment to the revolutions of 1848, then through 19th-century imperialism and industrialization, the two world wars, the decolonization wave of the late 20th century, and the rise of globalization. It’s grand-scale history along the lines of the “Age Of …” series (“The Age of Revolution” and so on) by Eric Hobsbawm. . . . Storm’s book tells the long and dramatic story of how nations conquered the world and became the dominant form of political organization of our era. It also makes clear that this era is far from over.""---Joshua Keating, Washington Post ""[Storm is] a punctilious historian.... Alongside meticulously detailed accounts of wars, politics and treaties [he] paints an engaging picture of the role played by extrapolitical and cultural factors in the construction of nation-states and national identities.""---Tunku Varadarajan, Wall Street Journal ""Comprehensive. . . . A detailed examination of the origin, use, and future of nationalist ideologies."" * Kirkus Reviews *