The Decline of the Cloth Industry in Birnbaum (Międzychód) After the Napoleonic Wars
In: Studia historiae oeconomicae: the journal of Adam Mickiewicz University, Volume 36, Issue 1, p. 91-97
ISSN: 2353-7515
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In: Studia historiae oeconomicae: the journal of Adam Mickiewicz University, Volume 36, Issue 1, p. 91-97
ISSN: 2353-7515
In this article I focus on the questions of how the social roles of Germans and Poles changed after Międzychód/Birnbaum came back to Poland on January 17, 1920; what were the stages in the process of change the town went through; and, what factors were responsible for this change. I begin with a broader introduction presenting, first, the situation in the early modern times, pointing to what it meant to be 'Polish' in a 'German'-dominated urban society in the Greater Poland region; and, second, the change which occurred during the nineteenth century. With the examples of individual biographies, I show the variety of role perceptions in a mixed Polish-German setting. The main section analyses the ways in which the role reversal was enforced in favour of Międzychód's Poles in the arena of local politics, which is preceded by a glance at the impact of an international conflict between Germany and Poland on the lot of German 'optants' – i.e. those who had opted for keeping the German citizenship and who later on were forced by the Polish authorities, in most cases, to leave Poland. My argument is that the role reversal in Międzychód/Birnbaum was a protracted process, which began with the onset of nationalism and was facilitated by economic and social change.
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In this article I focus on the questions of how the social roles of Germans and Poles changed after Międzychód/Birnbaum came back to Poland on January 17, 1920; what were the stages in the process of change the town went through; and, what factors were responsible for this change. I begin with a broader introduction presenting, first, the situation in the early modern times, pointing to what it meant to be 'Polish' in a 'German'-dominated urban society in the Greater Poland region; and, second, the change which occurred during the nineteenth century. With the examples of individual biographies, I show the variety of role perceptions in a mixed Polish-German setting. The main section analyses the ways in which the role reversal was enforced in favour of Międzychód's Poles in the arena of local politics, which is preceded by a glance at the impact of an international conflict between Germany and Poland on the lot of German 'optants' – i.e. those who had opted for keeping the German citizenship and who later on were forced by the Polish authorities, in most cases, to leave Poland. My argument is that the role reversal in Międzychód/Birnbaum was a protracted process, which began with the onset of nationalism and was facilitated by economic and social change.
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In: Nationalistische Politik und Ressentiments, p. 147-164
In: Frankfurter Studien zur Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte Ostmitteleuropas 10
In: Wege der Totalitarismusforschung
Table of Contents; Preface; Introduction: Cooperatives in Ethnic Conflicts -- Torsten Lorenz; Cooperatives as Part of the National Movement in the Baltic Countries -- Anu Mai Kõll; Three Paradigms of Cooperative Movements with Nationalist Taxonomy in Transylvania -- Attila Hunyadi; Jewish Cooperatives in Bessarabia between 1901 und 1940 -- Mariana Hausleitner; The Cooperative Movement in Tsarist and Early Soviet Russia: What Role did it play in Nation Building for the Different Ethnies? -- Stephan Merl; Between Russia and Ukraine: The Cooperators of Southern Ukraine, 1917-1920 -- Alexander Dillon