From Empire to Republic
Post-World War I Austria
Download Url(s)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt1n2txcsAuthor(s)
Bischof, Günter
Plasser, Fritz
Berger, Peter
Language
EnglishAbstract
The 18 essays in this volume offer innovative scholarship on the difficult transition from empire to republic for the small state of Austria, newly created by the Allied peacemakers in Paris in 1919. They also deal with the complex challenges posed by nation building after a major war, including the ambiguity inherent in the creation of new institutions in politics, economics, social life, and culture. In 1919 the government of the fledgling Republic of Austria was confronting revolutionary turmoil in the streets of Vienna, a near-total collapse of the agricultural and industrial economies, and the fallout of a crushing military defeat. In addition, the government was overburdened by the sheer number of new veterans, including the over 100,000 wounded soldiers returning from the frontlines. The redrawn Austrian borders produced a loss of German ethnics and major demographic shifts. Austrians—no longer dominant in a vast empire—were uncertain of their standing. In spite of ideological conflict between the major political camps, Austria experienced a cultural and educational revival—one that proved essential to forging a new national identity.
Keywords
History; Political Science; Military Studies; European StudiesISBN
9781608011353, 9781608010257Publisher
University of New Orleans PressPublication date and place
2010Series
Contemporary Austrian Studies,Classification
First World War
c 1914 to c 1918 (World War One period)
European history
General and world history
Politics and government