Soeben ist Heft 4/2022 der Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung / Journal of East Central European Studies erschienen. Es handelt sich um das von Michal Frankl betreute Themenheft „East Central Europe as a Place of Refuge in the Twentieth Century: State and Patterns of Historical Research“.
Aus der Einleitung: „Refugees were an important, and—as we argue—underestimated, part of the history of East Central Europe in the twentieth century. The articles in this issue all originate from the discussions and research in the European Research Council’s Consolidator project “Unlikely Refuge? Refugees and Citizens in East-Central Europe in the 20th Century.” The project team is systematically examining the forms and dilemmas of assistance to refugees in the Habsburg Empire during the First World War and in nation-states which were formed, figuratively speaking, upon its ruins—namely, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Hungary, Yugoslavia, and their successor states. It explores connections between citizenship and refugeedom in a region characterized by nationalism and ethnic homogenization, spaces of entanglement between refugees, government officials and aid workers, and neglected histories of local humanitarianism and its interactions with international organizations.“
INTRODUCTION
Michal Frankl: East Central Europe as a Place of Refuge in the Twentieth Century: Introduction to the State and Patterns of Historical Research (473–489), https://doi.org/10.25627/202271411251
ARTICLES
Ágnes Katalin Kelemen: Refugees and the “Other Hungary”: The Historiography of the Reception of Refugees in Twentieth-Century Hungary (491–514), https://doi.org/10.25627/202271411252
Lidia Zessin-Jurek: Poland, a Country of Refuge? Revisiting the Historiography on Patterns of Migration (515–554), https://doi.org/10.25627/202271411253
Michal Frankl: Scripting Refugees. Historians and Narrations of Refugeedom in Czechoslovak History (555–586), https://doi.org/10.25627/202271411254
Francesca Rolandi, Pieter Troch: Refugees in the Yugoslav Space: An Overview of the Historiography (587–617), https://doi.org/10.25627/202271411255
Maximilian Graf: Austria as a Cold War Refuge: Reassessing the Historiography (619–649), https://doi.org/10.25627/202271411256
FORUM
Rudolf Kučera: At the End of the End of History: Czech Historiography and the Ukrainian-Russian War (651–657), https://doi.org/10.25627/202271411257
BESPRECHUNGEN
Antwort auf die Sammelrezension von Maren Röger in der Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung 70 (2021), S. 503–504. Anne S. Respondek; Entgegnung der Rezensentin. Maren Röger (659)
Nathalie Kálnoky: The Szekler Nation and Medieval Hungary. Sonja Lessacher (660–661)
Literatur und Kultur zwischen West und Ost. Ana-Maria Schlupp (661–662)
Jerzy Michalski: Studia i szkice historyczne z XVIII i XIX wieku. Jacek Kordel (662–665)
Jacek Nowak, Sławomir Kapralski, Dariusz Niedźwiedzki: On the Banality of Forgetting. Klaus-Peter Friedrich (665–666)
Arnošt Vilém Kraus (1859–1943). Lena Dorn (666–668)
Chad Bryant: Prague. Florian Ruttner (668–670)
Ibolya Murber: Grenzziehung zwischen Ver- und Entflechtungen. Tamás Székely (670–671)
Sebastian Ramisch-Paul: Fremde Peripherie – Peripherie der Unsicherheit? Bálint Varga (672–673)
Hanna Kozińska-Witt: Jüdische Stadtdeputierte in der Zweiten Polnischen Republik. Stephanie Zloch (673–675)
Zwischen nationalen und transnationalen Erinnerungsnarrativen in Zentraleuropa. Matthias E. Cichon (675–677)
Catastrophe and Utopia. Tatsiana Astrouskaya (677–679)
Ludwik Hirszfeld: Geschichte eines Lebens. Friedrich Cain (679–680)
Mikhal Dekel: Die Kinder von Teheran. Michal Korhel (680–682)
Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland 1933–1945. Bd. 15: Ungarn 1944–1945. Beáta Márkus (682–683)
Kulturpolitik in Ostmittel- und Südosteuropa (1945–2015). Maren Hachmeister (684–685)
Peter Bahl: Belastung und Bereicherung. Magdalena Abraham-Diefenbach, Konrad-Karl Tschäpe (685–687)
Béla Tomka: Austerities and Aspirations. Victoria Harms (687–689)
Małgorzata Popiołek-Roßkamp: Warschau. Andrew Demshuk (690–692)
Nicole Kandioler: Widerständige Nostalgie. Magdalena Saryusz-Wolska (692–693)
ANZEIGEN (694–695)