I have elsewhere argued that we need to think ourselves beyond the nation. In this essay, I seek to deepen that that argument by paying close attention to one dimension of the modern nation form - territoriality. Recognizing with Anderson that the nation is an imagined thing. I also recognize the critical reciprocal of his insight, that it is the imagination that will have to carry us beyond the nation. Thus what follows is a critical work of the imagination, which recognizes the difficulty, sharply articulated by Shapiro, of constructing “post-sovereign” moral geographies.