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Bøger i Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe serien

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  • - Adriatic Multi-Nationalism in Habsburg Dalmatia, Trieste, and Venice
    af Dominique Kirchner Reill
    820,95 kr.

    A history of the efforts of community leaders and intellectuals in Venice, Trieste, and Dalmatia to create a multi-national region along the shores of the Adriatic Sea, based on a nationalism that valued diversity, not homogeneity.

  • - Russian, Polish, and Ukrainian Political Imaginations
    af Serhiy Bilenky
    881,95 kr.

    This book explores the political imagination of Eastern Europe in the 1830s and 1840s, as Polish, Russian, and Ukrainian intellectuals came to identify themselves as belonging to communities known as nations or nationalities.

  • - The Cultural Spaces of a Vanished Land
     
    821,95 kr.

    This volume looks both back and ahead to focus on what has been lost and what has been achieved two decades after the dissolution of Yugoslavia.

  • - War, Social Breakdown, and Mass Violence, 1914-1945
    af Raz Segal
    343,95 - 1.275,95 kr.

    A history of the assault of the Hungarian state during World War II against the multi-ethnic and multi-religious society in the Carpathian borderland with the aim of transforming the region into an integral part of a "Greater Hungary" dominated by ethnic Hungarians.

  • - State Making in Imperial Austria from the Enlightenment to the First World War
    af John Deak
    825,95 kr.

    The Habsburg Monarchy ruled over approximately one-third of Europe for almost 150 years. Previous books on the Habsburg Empire emphasize its slow decline in the face of the growth of neighboring nation-states. John Deak, instead, argues that the state was not in eternal decline, but actively sought not only to adapt, but also to modernize and build.Deak has spent years mastering the structure and practices of the Austrian public administration and has immersed himself in the minutiae of its codes, reforms, political maneuverings, and culture. He demonstrates how an early modern empire made up of disparate lands connected solely by the feudal ties of a ruling family was transformed into a relatively unitary, modern, semi-centralized bureaucratic continental empire. This process was only derailed by the state of emergency that accompanied the First World War. Consequently, Deak provides the reader with a new appreciation for the evolving architecture of one of Europe's Great Powers in the long nineteenth century.

  • - The Nineteenth-Century Provinces in Eight Lives
    af Robert Nemes
    820,95 kr.

    A collective biography of eight individuals from the northeastern corner of prewar Hungary.

  • - Competing Literary Legacies of the 1648 Ukrainian Cossack Uprising
     
    873,95 kr.

    This is a study of literary representations of the controversial 17th-century Cossack Hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky in Ukrainian, Polish, Russian, Yiddish, and Hebrew.

  • - The Transylvanian Question and the European Idea during World War II
    af Holly Case
    354,95 - 1.285,95 kr.

    Between States uses the story of a territorial dispute between Hungary and Romania to recast the narrative of the Second World War and how it fits into the history of Europe in the twentieth century.

  • - The Cultural Politics of Rebuilding East Berlin
    af Paul Stangl
    826,95 kr.

  • - The 1898 Anti-Jewish Riots in Habsburg Galicia
    af Daniel Unowsky
    818,95 kr.

    In the spring of 1898, thousands of peasants and townspeople in western Galicia rioted against their Jewish neighbors. Attacks took place in more than 400 communities in this northeastern province of the Habsburg Monarchy, in present-day Poland and Ukraine. Jewish-owned homes and businesses were ransacked and looted, and Jews were assaulted, threatened, and humiliated, though not killed. Emperor Franz Joseph signed off on a state of emergency in thirty-three counties and declared martial law in two. Over five thousand individualsΓÇöpeasants, day-laborers, city council members, teachers, shopkeepersΓÇöwere charged with myriad offenses.Seeking to make sense of this violence and its aftermath, The Plunder examines the circulation of antisemitic ideas within Galicia against the political backdrop of the Habsburg state. Daniel Unowsky sees the 1898 anti-Jewish riots as evidence not of Galician backwardness and barbarity, but of a late nineteenth-century Europe reeling from economic, cultural, and political transformations wrought by mass politics, literacy, industrialization, capitalist agriculture, and government expansion. Through its nuanced analysis of the riots as a form of "exclusionary violence," this book offers new insights into the upsurge of the antisemitism that accompanied the emergence of mass politics in Europe at the turn of the twentieth century.

  • - Muslim Reform in the Balkans
    af Milena B. Methodieva
    825,95 kr.