On Civilization's Edge: A Polish Borderland in the Interwar World
Autor Kathryn Cianciaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 ian 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190067458
ISBN-10: 0190067454
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 28
Dimensiuni: 236 x 152 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190067454
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 28
Dimensiuni: 236 x 152 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
On Civilization's Edge is a model for how history can be made more "transnational" but still be rooted in a particular place and a well developed historiographical tradition. For that reason, and because of the quality of its analysis, it should become a staple in any graduate seminar in twentieth century European history. In addition, scholars of those states that were carved out of the wreckage of the central European empires afterWorld War I would do well to spend time with this book.
Ciancia has written a remarkably detailed and carefully argued book. It will be of interest to historians of modern Poland, to be sure, but its arguments will also appeal to scholars from across a variety of regions.
On Civilization's Edge offers a fascinating historical case that highlights the fluid boundaries of collective identity, notions of civility, and how those limits were redrawn and wielded for political leverage and institutional or ideological gains.
Does Volhynia matter? Kathryn Ciancia's elegant study of this remote outpost of interwar Poland, and of the micropolitics of the new state's claims to sovereignty in the region, shows us that it does. Focusing on an army of experts, teachers, settlers and border guards and their efforts to measure, inculcate, and patrol Volhynian spaces and populations, Ciancia effortlessly connects the local and the global, positioning Volhynia against a broader panorama of twentieth-century modernity.
On Civilization's Edge is an extraordinary contribution to the history of Europe, nationalism, and empire. Based on sources in five languages from fourteen archives, Kathryn Ciancia has written a local history that is firmly grounded in a global context. Her argument situates the Polish "civilizing mission" in Volhynia in the global framework of European colonial and imperial projects in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and should be of interest to scholars interested in the entangled histories of empire and nationalism in Europe and beyond.
This important book explores the ethnic complexity of the interwar Polish republic by focusing on the relation of the state to the border province of Volhynia. Ciancia's research illuminates in new ways our understanding of Polish, Ukrainian, and Jewish history, and offers valuable insight into the ideological meaning of 'civilization' in twentieth-century Eastern Europe. This is one of the most stimulating studies of interwar Poland that I have read in recent years.
Kathryn Ciancia's excellent case study of Volhynia province is an on-the-ground story of how modern nationalism operated in a contested region
Kathryn Ciancia offers a magisterial case study of Volhynia: a former Russian-imperial province where self-identified Poles formed a heterogeneous minority amid Jewish-dominated towns and a Ukrainian-dominated countryside. [...] Ciancia's local analysis translates broad conceptions of nationalism, empire, and civilization into everyday human quandaries in flux.
This thought-provoking, engagingly written, and deeply researched volume is a major contribution to Polish, Ukrainian, and Jewish history as well as to the study of nationalism and imperialism.
Ciancia has written a remarkably detailed and carefully argued book. It will be of interest to historians of modern Poland, to be sure, but its arguments will also appeal to scholars from across a variety of regions.
On Civilization's Edge offers a fascinating historical case that highlights the fluid boundaries of collective identity, notions of civility, and how those limits were redrawn and wielded for political leverage and institutional or ideological gains.
Does Volhynia matter? Kathryn Ciancia's elegant study of this remote outpost of interwar Poland, and of the micropolitics of the new state's claims to sovereignty in the region, shows us that it does. Focusing on an army of experts, teachers, settlers and border guards and their efforts to measure, inculcate, and patrol Volhynian spaces and populations, Ciancia effortlessly connects the local and the global, positioning Volhynia against a broader panorama of twentieth-century modernity.
On Civilization's Edge is an extraordinary contribution to the history of Europe, nationalism, and empire. Based on sources in five languages from fourteen archives, Kathryn Ciancia has written a local history that is firmly grounded in a global context. Her argument situates the Polish "civilizing mission" in Volhynia in the global framework of European colonial and imperial projects in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and should be of interest to scholars interested in the entangled histories of empire and nationalism in Europe and beyond.
This important book explores the ethnic complexity of the interwar Polish republic by focusing on the relation of the state to the border province of Volhynia. Ciancia's research illuminates in new ways our understanding of Polish, Ukrainian, and Jewish history, and offers valuable insight into the ideological meaning of 'civilization' in twentieth-century Eastern Europe. This is one of the most stimulating studies of interwar Poland that I have read in recent years.
Kathryn Ciancia's excellent case study of Volhynia province is an on-the-ground story of how modern nationalism operated in a contested region
Kathryn Ciancia offers a magisterial case study of Volhynia: a former Russian-imperial province where self-identified Poles formed a heterogeneous minority amid Jewish-dominated towns and a Ukrainian-dominated countryside. [...] Ciancia's local analysis translates broad conceptions of nationalism, empire, and civilization into everyday human quandaries in flux.
This thought-provoking, engagingly written, and deeply researched volume is a major contribution to Polish, Ukrainian, and Jewish history as well as to the study of nationalism and imperialism.
Notă biografică
Kathryn Ciancia is Associate Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.