List of Maps
List of Illustrations
Preface
Gary B. Cohen
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Constructing Nationalities in
East Central Europe
Pieter M. Judson
Chapter 1. From Tolerated Aliens to
Citizen-Soldiers: Jewish Military Service in the Era of Joseph
II
Michael K. Silber
Chapter 2. The Revolution in Symbols: Hungary
in 1848–1849
Robert Nemes
Chapter 3. Nothing Wrong with My Bodily Fluids:
Gymnastics, Biology, and Nationalism in the Germanies before
1871
Daniel A. McMillan
Chapter 4. Between Empire and Nation: The
Bohemian Nobility, 1880–1918
Eagle Glassheim
Chapter 5. The Bohemian Oberammergau:
Nationalist Tourism in the Austrian Empire
Pieter M. Judson
Chapter 6. The Sacred and the Profane: Religion
and Nationalism in the Bohemian Lands, 1880–1920
Cynthia Paces and Nancy M. Wingfield
Chapter 7. All For One! One for All! The
Federation of Slavic Sokols and the Failure of Neo-Slavism
Claire E. Nolte
Chapter 8. Staging Habsburg Patriotism:
Dynastic Loyalty and the 1898 Imperial Jubilee
Daniel Unowsky
Chapter 9. Arbiters of Allegiance:
Austro-Hungarian Censors during World War I
Alon Rachamimov
Chapter 10. Sustaining Austrian “National”
Identity in Crisis: The Dilemma of the Jews in Habsburg Austria,
1914–1919
Marsha L. Rozenblit
Chapter 11. “Christian Europe” and National
Identity in Interwar Hungary
Paul Hanebrink
Chapter 12. 12. Just What is Hungarian?
Concepts of National Identity in the Hungarian Film Industry,
1931–1944
David Frey
Chapter 13. The Hungarian Institute for
Research into the Jewish Question and Its Participation in the
Expropriation and Expulsion of Hungarian Jewry
Patricia von Papen-Bodek
Chapter 14. Indigenous Collaboration in the
Government General: The Case of the Sonderdienst
Peter Black
Chapter 15. Getting the Small Decree: Czech
National Honor in the Aftermath of the Nazi Occupation
Benjamin Frommer
Index
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.
“...an exciting and fascinating volume.” · Geschichte und Region/Storia e Regio “The essays in this volume are well framed theoretically; as a matter of equal importance, they are based on in-depth archival research, which gives texture, nuance, and authority to their conclusions. The book is recommended particularly for those who wish an introduction to the work of a dynamic group of scholars who have amply demonstrated the contingent, historically grounded, and diverse nature of nationalism.” · H-German “…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
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