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Constructing Nationalities in East Central Europe (Paperback)
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Constructing Nationalities in East Central Europe (Paperback)
Series: Austrian and Habsburg Studies
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insightful and informative .the essays in this volume contribute to
a better understanding of nationalism and nation-building in
multicultural East Central Europe. . German Studies Review The
hundred years between the revolutions of 1848 and the population
transfers of the mid-twentieth century saw the nationalization of
culturally complex societies in East Central Europe. This fact has
variously been explained in terms of modernization, state building
and nation-building theories, each of which treats the process of
nationalization as something inexorable, a necessary component of
modernity. Although more recently social scientists gesture to the
contingencies that may shape these larger developments, this
structural approach makes scholars far less attentive to the hard
work (ideological, political, social) undertaken by individuals and
groups at every level of society who tried themselves to build
national societies. The essays in this volume make us aware of how
complex, multi-dimensional and often contradictory this
nationalization process in East Central Europe actually was. The
authors document attempts and failures by nationalist politicians,
organizations, activists and regimes from 1848 through 1948 to give
East-Central Europeans a strong sense of national
self-identification. They remind us that only the use of
dictatorial powers in the 20th century could actually transform the
fantasy of nationalization into a reality, albeit a brutal one.
Pieter M. Judson is Associate Professor and Chair of the History
Department at Swarthmore College. His book Exclusive
Revolutionaries: Liberal Politics, Social Experience and National
Identity 1848-1914 (Michigan, 1996) won the Herbert Baxter Adams
Prize of the American historical Association in 1997 and the
Austrian Cultural institute's book prize in 1998. Marsha L.
Rozenblit is the Harvey M. Meyerhoff Professor of Jewish History at
the University of Maryland, College Park. She is the author of The
Jews of Vienna, 1867-1914: Assimilation and Identity (State
University of New York Press, 1983) and Reconstructing a National
Identity: The Jews of Habsburg Austria during World War I (Oxford
University Press, 2001).
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