Collective identities were often supposed to constitute a primordial component which would dissolve on the way to modernity, under the impact of universalistic pressures, social convergence and globalization. More recently, a new analytical perspective (usually associated with the work of Benedict Anderson and of Ernest Gellner in their respective studies of nationalism) became dominant, treating collective identities as a modern creation: the "imagined communities" shaped by modern nation-states. S. N. Eisenstadt concludes the volume with a chapter entitled: "The Comparative Significance of the Latin American Experience".
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