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The essays in this volume analyse issues of national and regional identity during a key phase of nation-state formation in mid-nineteenth century Europe. By asking how contemporaries articulated regional and national identities, the book offers a fresh prospective on the process of nationalization in modern German, Austrian and Italian histories.
'This is an extremely valuable and important contribution to the ongoing debate on nationalism and nation-building in Europe... The case studies..exemplify the advantages of a comparative historical approach, as they pose central questions about the complexity, fluidity and gradualness of the processes and pressures on pre-existing local loyalties, and illustrate and explain their crystallization in the face of the hardening lines of national identification in the decades following the revolutions of 1848-49.' - Professor Stuart Woolf, editor of Nationalism in Europe: From 1815 to the Present
'This book offers a fascinating insight into an area which one could describe as a European laboratory for the changes taking place in national and regional identities. Watching how these experiments unfolded is revealing for historians as well as for contemporary observers of the new Europe being built at the current time.' - Professor Dieter Langewiesche, University of Tübingen
'A very valuable contribution to the recent efforts to see nation and nation-state formation as contingent and constructed processes. The various contributions to this book are able to explore the complex ways in which national identity was constructed and promoted as well as given political expression' - John Breuilly, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK
'The essays...overall...bring forther interesting insights and pose questions that provoke further thoughton the nature and development of nationalism in nineteenth-century Europe.' - Jonathan Sperber, H-German (H-Net)
'Historians of central European nationalism in the nineteenth and twentieth century owe Laurence Cole a debt of gratitude for making this fine collection of essays available to an English-speaking audience.' Pieter M. Judson, German History
Auteur
ALBERTO MARIO BANTI Professor of Contemporary History, University of Pisa, Italy NIKOLAUS BUSCHMANN Researcher and Lecturer, Department of Modern History, University of Tübingen, Germany EVA CECCHINATO Researcher, University of Turin, Italy MARK CORNWALL Professor of Modern European History, University of Southampton, UK ERWIN FINK freelance Scholarly Translator and Editor and PhD graduate, University of Toronto, Canada HANS HEISS formerly Deputy Director of the Provincial Archive in South Tyrol, now a member of the South Tyrolean Regional Parliament, Austria EWALD HIEBL Lecturer in Austrian History, Department of History and Political Sciences, University of Salzburg, Austria MAX VÖGLER Programme Officer, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Bonn, Germany ANNA MILLO Lecturer in Contemporary History, Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Bari, Italy CLAIRE NOLTE Professor of History, Manhattan College in New York, USA DOMINIQUE REILL Fellow at the Remarque Institute for the Study of Europe and Visiting Fellow at the Center for European and Mediterranean Studies, New York University, USA
Contenu
Preface; G.E.Rusconi Introduction: Re-examining National Identity in Nineteenth-century Central Europe and Italy; L.Cole A Mission of Meditation: Dalmatia's Multi-National Regionalism form the 1830s - 1860s; D.Reill 'Unity Versus Fragmentation': The Politics of Region-Building and National Identities in Tyrol, 1830-1867; L.Cole & H.Heiss Trieste, 1830-70: from Cosmopolitanism to the Nation; A.Millo Voluntary Associations and the Building of Czech and German Nations in Nineteeth-Century Prague; C.Nolte German, Austrian or "Salzburgerisch"? National Identities in Salzburg c.1830-70; E.Hiebl Searching for a Role: Austrian Rule, National Perspectives and Memories of 'the Serenissima'in Venice (1848-66); E.Cecchinato The Construction of National Identities in the Northern Bohemian Borderland 1848-71; M.Cornwall Between the Federative Nation and the National State: Public Perceptions of the Foundation of the German Empire in Southern Germany and Austria; N.Buschmann Similar Paths, Different 'Nations'?: Ultramontanisation and the Old Catholic Movement in Upper Austria 1870-1; M.Vögler Symbolic Representations of the Nation: Baden, Bavaria, and Saxony c.1860-80; E.Fink Conclusions: Performative Effects and 'deep images' in the Discourse of National Identities; A.M.Banti