Rövid leírás:
At the end of World War I, an eclectic group of Polish „civilizers” from border guards and urban planners to teachers and military settlers-descended upon a poor, war-torn, and multi-ethnic borderland that had previously been part of the Russian empire. On Civilization’s Edge examines how fears of national weakness, competitions for local power, and mounting anxieties about the rise of Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union set the stage for Polish statesmen to assert their right to rule over the region’s ethnic minorities.
Több
Hosszú leírás:
As a resurgent Poland emerged at the end of World War I, an eclectic group of Polish border guards, state officials, military settlers, teachers, academics, urban planners, and health workers descended upon Volhynia, an eastern borderland province that was home to Ukrainians, Poles, and Jews. Its aim was not simply to shore up state power in a place where Poles constituted an ethnic minority, but also to launch an ambitious civilizing mission that would transform a poor Russian imperial backwater into a region that was at once civilized, modern, and Polish. Over the next two decades, these men and women recast imperial hierarchies of global civilization-in which Poles themselves were often viewed as uncivilized-within the borders of their supposedly anti-imperial nation-state.
As state institutions remained fragile, long-debated questions of who should be included in the nation re-emerged with new urgency, turning Volhynia’s mainly Yiddish-speaking towns and Ukrainian-speaking villages into vital testing grounds for competing Polish national visions. By the eve of World War II, with Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union growing in strength, schemes to ensure the loyalty of Jews and Ukrainians by offering them a conditional place in the nation were replaced by increasingly aggressive calls for Jewish emigration and the assimilation of non-Polish Slavs.
Drawing on research in local and national archives across four countries and utilizing a vast range of written and visual sources that bring Volhynia to life, On Civilization’s Edge offers a highly intimate story of nation-building from the ground up. We eavesdrop on peasant rumors at the Polish-Soviet border, read ethnographic descriptions of isolated marshlands, and scrutinize staged photographs of everyday life. But the book’s central questions transcend the Polish case, inviting us to consider how fears of national weakness and competitions for local power affect the treatment of national minorities, how more inclusive definitions of the nation are themselves based on exclusions, and how the very distinction between empires and nation-states is not always clear-cut.
On Civilization’s Edge is a model for how history can be made more „transnational” but still be rooted in a particular place and a well developed historiographical tradition. For that reason, and because of the quality of its analysis, it should become a staple in any graduate seminar in twentieth century European history. In addition, scholars of those states that were carved out of the wreckage of the central European empires afterWorld War I would do well to spend time with this book.
Több
Tartalomjegyzék:
Preface: A Conversation
Introduction: On the Edge, In the World
Chapter 1: Democracy as Civilizing Mission
Chapter 2: The Integration Myth
Chapter 3: The Many Meanings of the Border
Chapter 4: Polish Towns? Jewish Towns?
Chapter 5: Depoliticizing the Volhynian Village
Chapter 6: Regionalism, or The Limits of Inclusion
Chapter 7: Thinking Technocratically
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography




