Global Approaches to Habsburg History: Perspectives, Potentials, Payoffs, and Pathways

Global Approaches to Habsburg History: Perspectives, Potentials, Payoffs, and Pathways

Veranstalter
Jonathan Singerton, University of Innsbruck
Veranstaltungsort
Universität Innsbruck
PLZ
6020
Ort
Innsbruck
Land
Austria
Vom - Bis
02.06.2022 - 03.06.2022
Von
Jonathan Singerton, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften und Europäische Ethnologie, Universität Innsbruck

Universität Innsbruck, 2. bis 3 June 2022.

Global Approaches to Habsburg History: Perspectives, Potentials, Payoffs, and Pathways

Global history and its offshoots have been usual lenses for reinvigorating the past in multiple contexts and spaces. Approaches accentuating aspects of circulation, mobility, transfer, and transnational trade have illuminated the interconnectedness of previous centuries. For the history of the Habsburg monarchy from sixteenth to the twentieth centuries, however, this historical lens has been used only sparingly. Works on Habsburg colonial ambitions, worldwide economic linkages, and transatlantic connections—to name only a few themes—have demonstrated many promising pathways. Yet global approaches to Habsburg history have tended to remain isolated from one another. Hence the goal of this event is to apply global methodologies to a region too often maligned and left out of the worldwide picture.

Programm

THURSDAY (02/06/2022) – Claudiasaal (Herzog-Friedrich-Straße 3)

09:30 Opening Remarks

Ulrike Tanzer, Vice Rector for Research
Dirk Rupnow, Dean of the Philosophical-Historical Faculty
Jonathan Singerton, Host and Organiser

10:00 Keynote 1

Traffic: Cocaine Smuggling, Imperial Prestige and Global Politics at the End of the Habsburg Era – Alison Frank Johnson (Harvard)
Comment: Pieter Judson (Florence)

11:15 BREAK

11:45 Panel 1 – Global Economies

Chair: Ellinor Forster
1. Natives and Newcomers: Political Economy and the challenge of the global in Habsburg Europe, 1680–1740 – William O’Reilly (Cambridge)
2. Habsburg Political Economy and Globalisation: Mercantilist Discourses and the Framing of Global Commerce during the Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries – Klemens Kaps (Linz)
3. Statistics as an Agent of Globalization: The Case of Habsburg Statisticians – Mátyás Erdélyi (Prague)

13:15 LUNCH

14:30 Panel 2 – Habsburg Orientalism

Chair: Gunda Barth-Scalmani
4. Austro-Hungarian Consuls: Global Actors of Diplomacy and Empire – Sven Mörsdorf (Florence)
5. The Orient as porta Habsburgica mundi: Travellers, Missionaries, and Experts Go East in the Age of Transformation – Barbara Haider-Wilson (Vienna)
6. Orientalism from an Alpine View: The German-Austrian Alpine Club and its Turkestan Expedition in 1913 – Kurt Scharr (Innsbruck)

16:00 BREAK

16:30 Panel 3 – Habsburg Hispanic and Lusophone Worlds

Chair: Mona Garloff
7. The Viennese Court as the Mediator amidst the Portuguese Crisis? Austrian Diplomacy during Vilafrancada and Abrilada Revolts (1822–1825) – Oliver Zajac (Bratislava/Warsaw)
8. Kaiser Max in Mexiko: A Habsburg Perspective – Axel Körner (Leipzig)

FRIDAY (03/06/2022) – Claudiasaal (Herzog-Friedrich-Straße 3)

09:00 Keynote 2

An epistemological view on the Austrian Empire’s role in European colonialism – Walter Sauer (Vienna)
Comment: Eric Burton (Innsbruck)

10:15 BREAK

10:45 Panel 4 – Transimperial Encounters

Chair: Axel Körner
9. A Devilish Plan by the Jesuits, Anti-Jesuit Intrigue, or a Habsburg Plan for Global Expansion? The Case of Joseph Göbel and the Memorandum on the Austrian Colonisation of Northern Mexico – Markéta Křížová (Prague)
10. The House of Habsburg and Japanese Representations ca. 1740: Aspects of the Prince’s Mirror from Jesuit Theatre – Haruka Oba (Kurume)
11. The Habsburg Lands and the Dutch East India Company – Olga Witmer (Cambridge)
12. Terra Australis or Terra Austriae? Austria-Hungary in the South Seas – Jonathan Singerton (Innsbruck)

12:45 LUNCH

13:45 Panel 5 – Global Gateways

Chair: Stefan Ehrenpreis
13. Ostend: Developing a Habsburg Window upon the World – Michael-W. Serruys (Brussels)
14. The Austrian Colonial and Slave Trader: Friedrich von Romberg (1729–1819) and his Business Empire in the Austrian Netherlands – Magnus Ressel (Frankfurt/Greifswald)
15. Enterprising Merchants in the Global Atlantic: The Austrian Netherlands Trade with Western and Central Africa 1776–1786 – Stan Pannier (Brussels)

15:15 BREAK

15:45 Panel 6 – Material Interjections

Chair: Jonathan Singerton
16. Mapping Early Modern Gift-Giving Networks: A Quantitative Study of Habsburg Exchanges of Non-European Goods – Joanna Ciemińska (Lisbon)
17. Folklore from Near and Far: Museums and Colonial Ethnography in the Austro-Hungarian Empire – Corinne Geering (Leipzig)
18. Inserting the Habsburg Past into Global History: Notes towards a Mutual Reconfiguration of both Fields – Franz Fillafer (Vienna)

17:15 Concluding Discussion

SATURDAY (04/06/2022)

Excursion to Schloss Ambras for ‘eine 11:30 Weltreise’ guided tour