The Danube and Ways of Imagining Europe

  • Schillmeier M
  • Pohler W
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Abstract

This paper is concerned with the River Danube as a European object that articulates forms of relations which, by linking human and non-humans in highly specific ways, create actor-networks that dispute common societal divisions and (b)orders. By discussing the contested social relevance of the River Danube, this paper visualizes different ways of imagining Europe. Following some of the controversies concerning the River Danube, we outline a process oriented, transnational research agenda for a specific European object with the conceptual explication of human and non-human relations at its core.

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Schillmeier, M., & Pohler, W. (2010). The Danube and Ways of Imagining Europe. The Sociological Review, 58(2_suppl), 25–43. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954x.2011.01959.x

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