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El. knyga: Disputed Austro-Hungarian Border: Agendas, Actors, and Practices in Western Hungary/Burgenland after World War I

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The collapse of the Habsburg monarchy in the aftermath of World War I marked a foundational shift in the histories of Austria and Hungary. Previously part of the Habsburg’s Austro-Hungarian Empire, this event stripped the two new states of a long-established territorial order, triggering a controversial redrawing of their borders. Whilst scholarship often focuses on the role played by state actors in Vienna and Budapest, The Disputed Austro-Hungarian Border refreshingly re-examines this event through investigating how processes of state and nation-building manifested within the contested region of Western Hungary and Burgenland. In doing so, this book innovatively resituates this border region within the larger context of post-Habsburg historical development taking place across Central Europe.

Recenzijos

[ T]his book is an important, significant addition to the current scholarship on empire and post-imperial breakdown and transition, and on the Habsburg/post-Habsburg history of borderlands. Marco Bresciani, University of Florence





This is a very convincing edited volume on the transformation of power from the Austro-Hungarian Empire to the Austrian Republic after the First World War. Looking at one particular region, Burgenland, that was contested between two losers of the War, the book provides insight into macro- and micro-level decision making processes, changes in hierarchies and power relations between social, ethnic, political and religious groups inhabiting this border region. Tim Buchen, Technische Universität Dresden

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments



Introduction: The Separation of Austria and Hungary after World War I: A
Borderland Perspective

Hannes Grandits



Part I: Discussing, Implementing and Explaining a New Border (Region)



Chapter
1. The Role of Bolshevism and Anti-Bolshevism in the Struggle for
Western Hungary and Burgenland

Ibolya Murber



Chapter
2. The Interallied Commission for the Delimitation of the Boundary
between Austria and Hungary, and the New International Order in Austria

Michael Burri



Chapter
3. Graz Geographers at the Birth of Burgenland: Robert Sieger and
Marian Sidaritsch

Ferenc Jankó



Part II: Surviving during (Post-) World War I Economic Disintegration and
the Polarization of Class



Chapter
4. Surviving and Resisting the Wartime Order: Black-Market Economy
in the Border Region of Wiener Neustadt during and after World War I

Sabine Schmitner-Laszakovits



Chapter
5. Polarization, Persistence and Political Mobilization of Class
Belongings in Western Hungary /Burgenland after World War I (1919-22)

Hannes Grandits



Part III: Evolution of a New Elite Power Balance



Chapter
6. Petite-Bourgeois Local Revolutions? Post-Habsburg Transitions,
Democratization, Local Elites, and the Place of Western-Hungary/Burgenland

Gįbor Egry



Chapter
7. The Birth of Burgenland and the End of the Esterhįzy-Estate

Melinda Harlov-Csortįn



Part IV: Post-Imperial Solidification of Ethnic Categories



Chapter
8. From Mosaic to Pigeonhole: Frames, Loyalties, and Policies among
the Croatian Speaking Population in Former Western Hungary/Burgenland

Katharina Tyran



Chapter
9. The Romani and Jewish Population in Burgenland at the Beginning
of the Inter-War Period

Ursula K. Mindler-Steiner



Index
Hannes Grandits is Professor of Southeast European History at Humboldt University in Berlin.