x-post: HABSBURG

The Center for Austrian Studies presents an international and interdisciplinary symposium

CREATING THE OTHER:

The Causes and Dynamics of Nationalism, Ethnic Enmity, and Racism in Central and Eastern Europe

Hubert H. Humphrey Institute, University of Minnesota, 6-8 May 1999

cosponsored by

The Austrian Cultural Institute, New York; The Kommision fuer neuere Geschichte Oesterreichs; The University of Minnesota College of Liberal Arts, Institute for Global Studies, Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, and Immigration History Research Center

PROGRAM

THURSDAY, 7 MAY

9:00-10:45 (concurrent sessions)

NATIONAL AND ETHNIC ENMITY: SOCIAL AND POLITICAL THEORY

The Causes of Nationalism, Michael Hechter, University of Arizona

Nationalism and the Collapse of Empires: 1959 and 1989 Compared, Edward Tiryakian, Duke University

The Global Dynamics of Ethnic Violence, Susan Olzak, Stanford University

THE HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE: CZECHS, GERMANS, HUNGARIANS

Hungarians and Germans in the Late 18th Century: Inventing Stereotypes, Olga Khavanova, Moscow State University

Czechs, Germans, Bohemians? Images of the Self and Other in Bohemia, 1800-1848, Hugh Agnew, George Washington University

The Image of the Other in the 19th Century: Historical Scholarship in the Czech Lands, Jiri Staif, Charles University

11:00 a.m.-12:45 p.m. (concurrent sessions)

THE PSYCHOLOGY OF ENMITY

The Psychology of Nationalism, Ethnic Enmity, and Racism in Central Europe, Peter Loewenberg, UCLA

UNCreating the Other: The Psychology of Conflict Resolution, Chesmak Farhoumand, York University

Crisis of the Self and the Other: An Explanatory Model, Juergen Furtwaengler, Hamburg Military Hospital

CREATING THE OTHER IN EASTERN EUROPE

Rejecting the Claims for Otherness: Russian Reaction Toward Ukranian Nationalism, 19th and 20th Centuries, Alexey Miller, Institute for Slavic Studies, Moscow

Gentry, Jews, and Peasants: Jews as the Others in the Formation of the Modern Polish Nation in Galicia, 1848-1914, Kai Struve, Herder Institute

Imagining the Slavs: The Changing View from German Nationalism to National Socialism, Christian Promitzer, University of Graz

Lunch

2:30 p.m.-4:15 p.m. (concurrent sessions)

DEFINING THE SELF, CREATING THE OTHER

Becoming Caucasian: Vicissitudes of Whiteness in American Politics and Culture, Matthew Frye Jacobson, Yale University

Rethinking the Idea of the Other: The Case of African Americans, Rose Brewer, University of Minnesota

Denying Community: The Production of Antagonism in the Discourse of Everyday Life in Israel and Yugoslavia, Glenn Bowman, University of Kent

CREATING PERCEPTIONS OF MUSLIMS

Creating the Other through Violence: New Identities Emerging from the Ashes of the Former Yugoslavia, Daniele Conversi, Central European University

The Changing Perception of Muslim Minorities in the Balkans, Ulf Brunnbauer, University of Graz

Islam in the Balkans 1989-1997,Valeria Heuberger, University of Vienna

6:15 p.m.

Reception, Dinner, and Kann Memorial Lecture

The National Question Revisited: Reflections on the State of the Art, Professor Dennison Rusinow, Center for International Studies, University of Pittsburgh

FRIDAY 7 MAY

9:00-10:45 (concurrent sessions)

THE AUSTRIAN EXPERIENCE: ETHNICITY AND POLITICS

The Development and Functions of Ethnic Stereotypes in Austria and in Hungary in the Nineteenth Century, Andras Vari, Budapest University of Economics

The Other in Present Day Austria and Its Political Implications, Anneliese Rohrer, Die Presse

Austria's Siege Mentality: Subnational Identities in Theoretical and Comparative Perspective, Anton Pelinka, University of Innsbruck

NATIONALISM IN THE HABSBURG EMPIRE

National and Political Heroes, Waltraud Heindl, Austrian Southeast Europe Institute

Nationalist Violence in Small Town Austria at the Turn of the Century, Pieter Judson, Swarthmore College

The Austrian-Slovenian-Italian Border Region (Dreilandereck): Causes and Consequences of the Partition of a Region by Nation States, Andreas Moritsch, University of Vienna

11:00 a.m.-12:45 p.m. (concurrent sessions)

IMAGES OF THE OTHER: LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND DISCOURSE

Creation of Other through the Linguistic (Diectic) Aspects of Nationalism, Tomasz Kamusella, Wroclaw University

Diseases of Jews and African-Americans: A Comparison, Klaus Hoedl, University of Graz

Black Women's Bodies as Constructed as Other by Europeans, Michelle Lockhart, Hamline University

THE FUNCTIONS OF THE OTHER: AUSTRIA

Imagination, Rhetoric and Economic Nationalism in the Late Habsburg Monarchy, Catherine Albrecht, University of Baltimore

Multifaceted and Complex Strangeness: Historical Interpretive Scenarios Austrian Reaction to the Other, Josef Ehmer and Sylvia Hahn, University of Salzburg

Cultural Pluralism through Translation? Imagining the Other in the Habsburg Monarchy, Michaela Wolf, University of Graz

Lunch

2:30 p.m.-4:15 p.m. (concurrent sessions)

THE FUNCTIONS OF THE OTHER: ANTI-SEMITISM

Waves of Hate: Romanian Anti-Semitism Before the Holocaust, William Brustein, University of Minnesota

National Identities and the Jewish Question in Postwar Germany, Austria, and Eastern Europe: A Comparison, Helga Embacher, University of Salzburg

THE FUNCTIONS OF NATIONALISM

The Mobile Frontier: Symbolic Boundary Construction at the Borders of the Balkans, Pamela Ballinger, Bowdoin College

From the Hearth to the Workplace: Nationalist Strategies of Female Teachers in Croatia,1900 1914, Meghan Hays, University of Michigan

Self as Other: Fluid Identities in Central Europe before 1945, Peter Thaler, University of Minnesota

Projekt Mitteleuropa: Croatians and the Politics of Recognition in the New Europe, Daphne Winland, York University

6:30 p.m. Dinner

SATURDAY, 8 MAY

9:00-10:45 (concurrent sessions)

CREATING NATIONAL IDENTITIES IN THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA

Obsessed with Originality: Multicultural Society in Slovenia, Oto Luthar, University of Maribor

Serbia between East and West, Dejan Guzina, Carleton University

Nationalism and the Yugoslavian Conflict in European Context, Vanessa Pupavac, University of Nottingham

VIEWING THE OTHER AND ONESELF

Searching for the Other Across the Generational Gap: A Journey, Bjorn Krondorfer, St. Mary's College of Maryland

Imaging Identical Twins: Dynamics of Creating the Other, Jean Strommer and Joan Strommer, University of Minnesota and Virginia Commonwealth College

11:00 a.m.-12:45 p.m. (concurrent sessions)

THE ROMA, PAST AND PRESENT

The Roma: Myth and Reality, Ian Hancock, University of Texas, Austin

Ethnic Minorities in Czech and Slovak Schools: Policies and Representations, 1940s-1990s, David Canek, Charles University

Roma Migration to Canada, Barbara Falk, York University

From the Margins to Multiculturalism: The Representational Politics of the Roma Migration to Canada, Gerald Kernerman, York University

DEFINING THE SELF AND THE OTHER IN CENTRAL EUROPE

Ethnology, Cultural Reification, and the Dynamics of Difference in the Kronprinzenwerk, Regina Bendix, University of Pennsylvania

National Stereotypes between the Austrians and Their Neighbors, 1895-1995, Arnold Suppan, University of Vienna

Establishment of Minority Schools in Imperial Austria, Atsushi Otsuru, Kobe University

State, Nation and the Enemy: Identity Politics in the Political Literature of Czechoslovakia and Hungary, 1920-1939, Peter Haslinger, Albert Ludwigs University Freiburg

Lunch

2:30 p.m.-4:15 p.m. (concurrent sessions)

CREATING IMAGES OF GREEKS AND TURKS IN THE SCHOOLS

Angels and Demons: Greek and Turkish Images in School Textbooks, Lily Hamourtziadou and Bulent Gokay, Keele University

What Austrians Are Not: The Turk as the Other in Postwar Austrian Schools, Peter Utgaard, Washington State University

MAPPING THE SELF AND THE OTHER

Peoples of the Mountains, Peoples of the Plains: Space and Ethnographic Representation in the Balkans, Karl Kaser, University of Graz

Forging the Croatian Nation: The Ambiguity of Croatian Cultural Identity at the End of the Nineteenth Century, Sally Kent, University of Wisconson, Stevens Point

Representing National Territory: Cartography and Nationalism in Hungary, 1700-1848, Irina Popova, Central European University


Quelle = Email <H-Soz-u-Kult>

From: Daniel Pinkerton <danpink@gold.tc.umn.edu>
Subject: CONF: Creating the Other: The Causes and Dynamics of Nationalism'
Date: 28.02.1999


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