Mauritius is a poly-ethnic and poly-religious society whose inhabitants neither share a mythical distant past nor consider themselves culturally identical. The value of nationalism and nationhood as comparative concepts is questioned. Does nationalism necessarily imply ethnic homogeneity or could a variety of ethnic categories together make up a nation?
Mauritius is a poly-ethnic and poly-religious society whose inhabitants neither share a mythical distant past nor consider themselves culturally identical. The value of nationalism and nationhood as comparative concepts is questioned. Does nationalism necessarily imply ethnic homogeneity or could a variety of ethnic categories together make up a nation?
Mauritius is a poly-ethnic and poly-religious society whose inhabitants neither share a mythical distant past nor consider themselves culturally identical. The value of nationalism and nationhood as comparative concepts is questioned. Does nationalism necessarily imply ethnic homogeneity or could a variety of ethnic categories together make up a nation?