Our special issue discusses different perspectives on the important changes that took place in the transition from empire to nation-state at the end of the First World War, focusing especially on transnational connections, structural and historical continuities, and marginal voices that have been fully or partially concealed by the emphasis on a radical national awakening in 1918. Specific articles broach topics such as the implications of 1918 on notions of gender and ethnicity, 1918 and the violence of the Greater War, and the legacies and memories of 1918 across the 20th century. Our approach treats the New Europe of 1918 as a largely coherent geopolitical and cultural space, one which can be studied in an interdisciplinary fashion. We contend that 1918 is not simply a clean break in which one epoch cleanly makes way for another, but rather it is an ambiguous and contradictory pivot, one which created an Old-New Europe caught between the forces of the imperial past and those of the national future. Our intention is not to dismiss entirely the importance of the transformations of 1918 but rather to show how there exists a tension between those changes and the many continuities and legacies that cut across the traditional chronology.
CITATION STYLE
Newman, J. P., & Zách, L. (2021, July 1). Introduction: 1918 and the Ambiguities of Old-New Europe. Nationalities Papers. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/nps.2021.37
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