Japan Without Germany
In: Pacific affairs, Band 12, Heft 4, S. 370
ISSN: 0030-851X
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In: Pacific affairs, Band 12, Heft 4, S. 370
ISSN: 0030-851X
In: Foreign affairs, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 435
ISSN: 0015-7120
In: Food culture around the world
Timeline -- Historical overview -- Major foods and ingredients -- Cooking -- Typical meals -- Eating out -- Special occasions -- Diet and health -- Glossary -- Resource guide
In: New left review: NLR, Heft 57, S. 5-40
ISSN: 0028-6060
What have been the outcomes of reunification in the Federal Republic? Perry Anderson charts contradictory cross-currents within its polity, economy, culture and society, gauging the impact of a contested neo-liberal offensive on the 'Modell Deutschland' and its intellectual life. Adapted from the source document.
In: The Atlantic community quarterly, Band 24, Heft 4, S. 272
ISSN: 0004-6760
World Affairs Online
In: Central European history, Band 51, Heft 1, S. 56-65
ISSN: 1569-1616
Germany and all things German have long been the primary concern ofCentral European History(CEH), yet the journal has also been intimately tied to the lands of the former Habsburg monarchy. As the editor stated in the first issue, published in March 1968,CEHemerged "in response to a widespread demand for an American journal devoted to the history of German-speaking Central Europe," following the demise of theJournal of Central European Affairsin 1964. The Conference Group for Central European History sponsoredCEH, as well as the recently mintedAustrian History Yearbook(AHY). Robert A. Kann, the editor ofAHY, sat on the editorial board ofCEH, whose second issue featured a trenchant review by István Deák of Arthur J. May'sThe Passing of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1914–1918. The third issue contained the articles "The Defeat of Austria-Hungary in 1918 and the Balance of Power" by Kann, and Gerhard Weinberg's "The Defeat of Germany in 1918 and the Balance of Power." That same year,East European Quarterlypublished its first issue.
In: Journal of migration history, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 330-351
ISSN: 2351-9924
The complex routes taken by overseas migrants through nineteenth-century Central Europe included Vienna and Budapest as nodal points. In contrast to the ports of departure and arrival, and the role of labour migrants in urbanisation, the place of overseas migrants in larger urban histories of Vienna and Budapest remains largely unexplored. By using two case studies that represent the opposite sides on the spectrum of overseas travellers through Central Europe, this article aims to trace new directions such an exploration might take. Aiming to introduce the 'spatial turn' into the subject of overseas migration in Vienna and Budapest, it analyses how, on the local level, railway stations and the neighbouring areas functioned to accommodate shipping agencies, their agents and lodging houses, as well as the police, detention centres, and the local enterprise that helped to direct – facilitate or restrict – traffic through the urban fabric and between cities.
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In: OSCE yearbook: yearbook on the Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe (OSCE), Band 19, S. 219-230
World Affairs Online
In: The review of politics, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 173-182
ISSN: 1748-6858
As weak as France may be among the Great Powers the world is still interested in our reactions, our desires, our resentments, our hopes, sometimes even in our plans in the way one politely questions old ladies who have recently held positions of the first importance. Regarding what Jules Romains used to call before the war the "French-German couple"—a couple which hardly knows more than the sadistic and masochistic forms of love—the simple geographical situation of the two countries justifies, better than any vain politeness, the more or less anxious curiosity of our foreign friends. Among the immediate neighbors of Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia are too closely bound today to Russia to consider their policy independently of the general problem which the immediate or future plans of the new Russia present. Denmark, Holland, and Belgium can timidly demand modest "frontier rectifications"; for none of these involves territories of importance to the economic or political equilibrium of Germany. Besides, it seems, rightly or wrongly, that these little nations have definitely chosen the road of the "Western bloc" while France tries with an unequal success to navigate alone among the broad currents which clash in the world ocean.
In: Slavjanovedenie, Heft 1, S. 130
Lagno A.R. Borders and Spaces in the History of Eastern Europe: From the Fixed to the Phantom Ones // Slavic Studies. JournalofRussianAcademyofSciences. = Slavyanovedenie. 2022. No.1.
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Working paper