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Primordialism, or at least linguistic primordialism,
despite its problematicity for anthropologists and other analysts as an
analytical concept, seems to be still alive in the world today, and shows no
signs of dying out, or being replaced by more `modern' constructs. Linguistic
primordialism is as important to people in as highly-industrialized a country
as Japan as it is to speakers of smaller, less technologically-developed
linguistic cultures. Just as it seemed to be at one point an essentially
premodern phenomenon, it now seems also (or still) to be a post-modern
one. The dissolution of the large economic empires and multinational states
created in this century, often as a result of the aftermath of world wars, or
as the product of new economic systems, has seen the rebirth of primordialism
of various sorts, including the linguistic, and far from being a nineteenth-century phenomenon, now seems destined to continue unabated into the twenty-first.
Harold Schiffman
12/3/1998