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LS 2024: Migration and the Formation of Central European Societies: A Birdseye's View on the
last 150 years of History (prof. dr. Philipp Strobl, Universität Wien)
COURSE SUMMARY
During the past 150 years, Central European societies have experienced different caesurae,
transformations and changes. Many of them were the result of highly mobile populations.
Migrants left a considerable footprint in Central Europe, in Germany, Austria, as well as
Hungary, the Czech Republic or Slovakia. The region is among the most heterogenic parts
of Europe and, for centuries, intense migration, mobility and exchange had made Central
Europe a multicultural space of exchange. The rise of culture and art in fin-de-si?cle Vienna
or Budapest has frequently been explained by the metropolises' roles as melting pots of
different cultures and ethnicities. The creation of nation states after the end of the First
world War, on the other hand, has led to an enormous wave of oppression resulting in the
displacement of millions with the illusion of creating homogenous nation states. This
development has characterized developments in the area over the following decades.
Central Europe, unlike many other areas in Europe, has experienced particularly different
crucial migrations (labor migration, forced migration, expulsion and displacement) during
the past 150 years. These caesurae influenced and transformed the region's societies. The
influx of millions of Displaced Persons (DPs) and ethnic-German expellees, for example,
triggered the creation of a new German society out of the ashes, pain, and destruction of the
Second World War.
Since narratives in Contemporary History, however, have been dominated by political
perspectives, migrations in Central Europe and their societal consequences rarely found
entrance into historiographic depictions. Even in states such as Austria, or Germany that
have become widely known as countries of immigration, not much is known about their
own migration history.
This course will rethink and revise European Modern History through a migration
perspective. Students will experience and understand history by focusing on crucial
migration caesurae, such as labor migration between Eastern and Central Europe, refugee
migration from and to different countries, as well as migration regimes during the Cold War
and within the European Union. The course will emphasise the question of how migration
has affected, altered and changed societies in Central Europe between the 19th and the 21st
century.
- Enseignant: Jiří Hutečka
- Enseignant: Philipp Luis Strobl