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Interwar Salzburg: Austrian Culture Beyond Vienna: New Directions in German Studies

Editat de Professor or Dr. Robert von Dassanowsky, Professor Katherine Arens Prof Imke Meyer
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 feb 2024
A long-overdue reassessment of post-1918 Salzburg as a distinct Austrian cultural hub that experimented in moving beyond war and empire into a modern, self-consciously inclusive, and international center for European culture.For over 300 years, Salzburg had its own legacy as a city-state at an international crossroads, less stratified than Europe's colonial capitals and seeking a political identity based in civic participation with its own economy and politics. After World War I, Salzburg became a refuge. Its urban and bucolic spaces staged encounters that had been brutally cut apart by the war; its deep-seated traditions of citizenship, art, and education guided its path.In Interwar Salzburg, contributors from around the globe recover an evolving but now lost vanguard of European culture, fostering not only new identities in visual and performing arts, film, music, and literature, but also a festival culture aimed at cultivating an inclusive public (not an international elite) and a civic culture sharing public institutions, sports, tourism, and a diverse spectrum of cultural identities serving a new European ideal.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9798765112588
Pagini: 360
Ilustrații: 5 b&w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in German Studies

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

Recovers Salzburg as an important site and refuge for modern European artistic, civic, and cultural identities as distinct from other portrayals of Austrian culture of the time

Notă biografică

Robert Dassanowsky is CU Distinguished Professor of Film and Austrian Studies at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, USA, and is a former President of the Austrian Studies Association. He works as an independent film producer, and his previous publications include Austrian Cinema: A History (2005) and Screening Transcendence: Film under Austrofascism and the Hollywood Hope 1933-1938 (2018). He is a jury member for the annual VIS: Vienna Shorts Film Festival.Katherine Arens is a Professor of Germanic Studies, Comparative Literature, and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, USA, and a former President of the Austrian Studies Association. Her most recent monographs are Vienna's Dreams of Europe and Belle Necropolis: Ghosts of Imperial Vienna (both 2015).

Cuprins

IntroductionRobert Dassanowsky (University of Colorado, USA) and Katherine Arens (University of Texas at Austin, USA)Prologue: The Capital of Europe. A Fantasy in Salzburg, 1900Hermann Bahr; translated by Vincent Kling (La Salle University, USA)I. Dreaming Salzburg: Hoping for hope, grasping at what it was and might have been . . . 1. Fantasy as Parody?: Hermann Bahr's Salzburg Dialogue Vincent Kling (La Salle University, USA)2. Salzburg's Age of Aquarius: Der Wassermann as an Austrian Sonderweg in the European ArtsKatherine Arens (University of Texas at Austin, USA)II. Choosing Salzburg: Cosmopolitan Refuge and the Search for a Third Way3. On Film in SalzburgRobert Dassanowsky (University University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, USA)4. The "World of Doomed Enchantment": Carl Zuckmayer and the 'Henndorf Circle'Christopher Dietz (Independent Scholar, Austria)III. Being Salzburg: Cultures Found and Lost5. In the Shadow of the Salzburg Festival?: The Mozarteum Foundation and Conservatory as Protagonists in Salzburg Music Culture Between the WarsJulia Hinterberger (University of Salzburg, Austria)6. Sports Culture Between State and DictatorshipAndreas Praher (University of Salzburg, Austria)7. Everyman and the New Man: Festival Culture in Interwar AustriaAlys X. George (New York University, USA)8. Shadow Sides of Modernism: Poldi Wojtek's Designs for the Salzburg Festival and Austria's Conservative ModernityJulia Secklehner (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)IV. Eyes on Salzburg: Salzburg Trapped and the Costs It Imposed9. Jewish Identities and Antisemitism in Salzburg after 1918Helga Embacher (University of Salzburg, Vienna)10. Hungarian Salzburgs: Salzburg and the Salzburg Idea as Inspiration for Cultural Policy Initiatives and Urban Tourism Development in Interwar HungaryAlexander Vari (Marywood University, USA)AfterwordBibliographyIndex

Recenzii

Interwar Salzburg is a beautiful volume on a neglected and fascinating subject. Dassanowsky and Arens are just the right people to bring this world to light, and their introduction is elegantly written to draw interwar Salzburg 'out of the shadows of the wreck of the Empire.' The essays collected here provide an impressive array of thoughtful understandings of this small city that was hard to see from Vienna-as it still is a century later. They aim at alternative historical narratives of Austria and Europe, in an effort to restore Europe's peripheries to national narratives and European histories.
Interwar Salzburg makes a case for Austria's 'second city' as a dynamic cultural space that worked to forge a modern, post-Habsburg Austrian and European identity after the upheavals of the First World War. This volume assembles an impressively interdisciplinary team of leading scholars who provide diverse perspectives on what it meant to be in, of, and from Salzburg between the wars. The essayscollected here offer compelling models of local and regional history that insist we think beyond national histories and the political and financial metropolises that that typically dominate those histories.