1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910874701003321

Autore

Jankó Ferenc

Titolo

From Borderland to Burgenland : Science, Geopolitics, Identity, and the Making of a Region

Pubbl/distr/stampa

2024

Budapest : , : Central European University Press, , 2024

©2024

ISBN

1-003-71974-0

963-386-650-2

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (381 pages)

Classificazione

SOC015000

Disciplina

943.615

Soggetti

Geopolitics - Austria - Burgenland

Germans - Austria - Burgenland

HISTORY / Europe / Austria & Hungary

Burgenland (Austria) History

Burgenland (Austria) Politics and government

Burgenland (Austria) Historiography

Hungary Boundaries Austria

Austria Boundaries Hungary

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Cover -- Front matter --   Title page --   Copyright page -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1. Introduction --   Approaches of the book --   Pictures of Burgenland -- Chapter 2. The Romance of the Monarchy --   Seen from Cisleithania --   Seen from Transleithania -- Chapter 3. Discoverers --   From language territory to territorial claim --   A tentative boundary recommendation --   The most Austrian geographer --   Burgenlandarbeit --   Pionierarbeit --   Explorers of north and south -- Chapter 4. Discoverers of Burgenland and German Geopolitics --   The Empire comes back --   Hands up, yogi! --   A German borderland in the southeast -- Chapter 5. Identity and Tourism --   Burgenland idyll --   Landeskunde, Heimatkunde -- Chapter 6. The Discovery of Burgenland in the Spatial and Temporal Perspective --  



We came to bid our farewells --   Grenzland reloaded -- Chapter 7. Private Discovery

Sommario/riassunto

The area that constitutes the Austrian federal province of Burgenland belonged to the Hungarian part of the Habsburg empire until the end of World War I. This book helps us realize that geographical knowledge does not come ready-made. Instead, it is created by knowledge makers: geographers, historians, statisticians etc. This knowledge-making helped to legitimatize the area transferred between Austria and Hungary, shape the Burgenland identity, and depict its geopolitical role in the rise of national socialism. This book is about how those studying Burgenland, the creators of its geographical knowledge, saw and represented the province. It explores how they grasped the geographical characteristics of the region through their own perspective, influenced by their own professional positions, individual careers, motivations, and by the broader historical and social medium. The way the area between the provinces of Lower Austria and Styria came about as Burgenland is enthralling, as is how the people there experienced this change of sovereignty and how everyday social and economic relationships were transformed. Tracing the geographical discourses in the interwar period and beyond, the book argues that Burgenland became a successful geographical project, and departs from thoughts of subdivision, unviability, and backwardness, concentrating instead on fertility, unity, and modernization.